Halewood International Ltd v Addleshaw Booth and Co: 2000

The court recognised the public interest in clients being able to retain the solicitors of their choice, and they should only be prevented from doing so on solid grounds.

Judges:

Neuberger J

Citations:

[2000] 1 PNLR 298

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedWinters v Mishcon De Reya ChD 15-Oct-2008
The claimant sought an injunction to prevent the defendant firm of solicitors acting for his employers against him. He said that they possessed information confidential to him having acted for him in a similar matter previously. The solicitors . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.276934

Regina v Lord Chancellor ex parte the Law Society (2): QBD 22 Jun 1993

The introduction of a Standard Fees Criminal Legal Aid regime did not require prior consultation with the Law Society. The rules had been imposed in accordance with the words of the enabling statute.

Citations:

Independent 22-Jun-1993, Times 25-Jun-1993

Statutes:

Legal Aid Act 1988 34

Judicial Review, Costs, Legal Aid, Legal Professions

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.163155

Nationwide Building Society v Various Solicitors: ChD 20 Jan 1998

Legal professional privilege could be set aside at disclosure where the fraudulent intention of one lay client was thereby shown as against another lender. The right to assert legal professional privilege does not apply to documents which came into existence in furtherance of a criminal or fraudulent purpose, but to overcome the privilege, there must be some prima facie evidence that the allegations of fraudulent or criminal purpose have some foundation of fact. ‘Provided the solicitor’s advice and assistance was employed in furtherance of the iniquity the exception came into play in relation to confidential communications between the solicitor and client which would otherwise be protected by the client’s privilege. It mattered not whether the solicitor was engaged to advise in relation to the misrepresentation or whether he was aware that his involvement was in furthering the iniquity.’

Judges:

Blackburne J

Citations:

Times 05-Feb-1998, Gazette 11-Feb-1998, [1999] PNLR 52, [1998] TLR 59

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedArundel Corporation (an Overseas Company) v Mohammed Ramzan Khokher CA 9-Apr-2003
In the course of an application under the Landlord and Tenant Act, the landlord sought to adduce on appeal evidence that the tenant and his solicitors had sought to deceive the court.
Held: The application should not be heard in private since . .
CitedAbbey National Plc v Clive Travers and Co (a Firm) CA 18-May-1999
The defendants appealed an order for discovery saying it would infringe their duty of confidence to their clients. The firm had acted for the buyer, seller and lender. A fraud on the lender was alleged. The solicitors sought to rely upon the . .
CitedX v Y Ltd (Practice and Procedure – Disclosure) EAT 9-Aug-2018
Iniquity surpasses legal advice privilege
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Disclosure
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Striking-out/dismissal
An Employment Judge struck out paragraphs of the Claimant’s claim as they depended on an email in respect of which legal advice privilege was claimed. . .
CitedBBGP Managing General Partner Ltd and Others v Babcock and Brown Global Partners ChD 20-Aug-2010
Norris J held:
‘Although the case law refers to crime or fraud or dishonesty (such as fraudulent breach of trust, fraudulent conspiracy, trickery or sham contrivances) it is plain that the term ‘fraud’ is used in a relatively wide sense: Eustice’s . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.84229

Aberdeen Solicitor’s Property Centre Ltd and Another v Director General of Fair Trading: RPC 20 Feb 1996

A restrictive practice on advertising imposed by the Law Society of Scotland related to legal practice and so was exempt from registration.

Citations:

Times 20-Feb-1996

Statutes:

Restrictive Trade Practices Act 1976 26

Commercial, Legal Professions

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.77609

Merck and Co v Interpharm: 1992

(Federal Court of Canada) Giles ASP said: ‘Solicitor and client privilege is one of the basic principles which permit the operation of our justice system and public confidence in it. In order to support the public interest in the inviolability of the solicitor and client relationship the courts have imposed great inconvenience and have overridden without question personal rights such as the right of a person to choose his own counsel. In this case there is no suggestion that a lawyer who once acted for the defendant is now with the plaintiffs’ firm. There is no suggestion of a solicitor and client relationship having been established between the defendants and anyone at Gowling’s. The public interest in solicitor and client relationship is not engaged.
In my view the implied undertaking would be most impractical if it resulted in an ability to remove from a case any solicitor who was bound by an implied undertaking. The implied undertaking is not of sufficient public interest when balanced against the right of a party to choose his own solicitors and the public interest in the efficient administration of justice to require the court to disqualify any solicitor who might wrongly deploy information subject to the undertaking. If a solicitor fails to observe the undertaking the remedy is to cite him for contempt, not to remove him.
A lawyer who takes cases regularly must have acquired a great deal of information subject to implied undertakings. In these days of specialized education and long work hours for junior lawyers, it is possible that a significant percentage of a lawyer’s general knowledge will have been acquired in his practice of law, there having been little other opportunity for him to acquire the same. It is equally possible that a large portion of that general knowledge will be subject to implied undertakings. If the defendant’s submissions are correct, few lawyers who have been called for any length of time will be able to take part in litigation. It is to be remembered that the undertaking is to the Court and is not limited to deploying information in cases involving one or more of the same parties.’

Judges:

Giles ASP

Citations:

[1992] 3 FC 774

Cited by:

CitedBritish Sky Broadcasting Group Plc and Another v Virgin Media Communications Ltd and others CA 6-Jun-2008
The parties were involved in litigation concerning allegations of anti-consumer practices. It was agreed that commercially sensitive documents should be exchanged, but the terms protecting the confidences could not be agreed. The parties were also . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Legal Professions

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.268777

Regina v General Council of the Bar ex parte Percival: 1991

The Bar Council was amenable to judicial review for an alleged failure to comply with its own Professional Conduct Committee Rules (annexed to the Code of Conduct for the Bar of England and Wales) even though neither the Code of Conduct nor the Professional Conduct Committee Rules had any statutory underpinning.

Citations:

[1991] 1 QB 212

Cited by:

CitedRutter, Regina (on the Application of) v The General Teaching Council for England Admn 1-Feb-2008
The applicant challenged a decision of disciplinary committee to go ahead with an allegation of misconduct after considerable delay by council and failure to abide by its own rules. After not receiving a notice of proceedings the applicant had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Administrative, Legal Professions

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.266117

Adams v London Motor Builders: 1921

A plaintiff whose claim was being supported and paid for by a trade union was nevertheless liable to the solicitor instructed by the Union for that solicitor’s costs.

Citations:

[1921] 1 KB 495

Cited by:

CitedBee v Jenson CA 13-Sep-2007
The claimant hired a car whilst his own, damaged by the defendant, was being repaired. His insurer sought to recover the cost from the other driver. The insurer had first arranged te hire with one company, but then another provided a finacial reward . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259336

Buckley v Lane Herdman: 1977

Buckley_Lane1977

A solicitor who was acting in conveyancing transactions and who was to achieve a simultaneous exchange of contracts on his client’s sale and purchase, but failed to do so may be liable in damages for negligence if the client suffered loss.

Citations:

[1977] CLY 3143

Legal Professions

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.251379

Edmundson v Render: 1905

The court considered a suggestion that a solicitor was not in breach of a non-compete clause promising to refrain from practising within a certain area where the work was carried out from an office outside the area.
Buckley J said: ‘The other [class of case] which I think would be equally a breach, is as follows. Suppose a client residing within the prohibited area comes to Harrogate to consult the solicitor, and the solicitor, after taking time to consider the matter, advises him by letter sent to him at his address within the prohibited area, is he acting as solicitor within the area? In my opinion he is. It does not matter whether he goes in person to the man ‘s house and says ‘I advise you’ so and so, or whether he writes him a letter and says, ‘I advise you’ so and so.’

Judges:

Buckley J

Citations:

[1905] 2 Ch 320

Cited by:

CitedAllan Janes Llp v Johal ChD 23-Feb-2006
The claimant sought to enforce a restrictive covenant against the defendant a former assistant solicitor as to non-competition within a certain distance of the practice for a period of three years. After leaving she had sought to set up partnership . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Legal Professions

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.240033

Wilson v Craig: 1983

Citations:

1983 SLT 556

Cited by:

CitedThe Scottish Lion Insurance Company Ltd, Re Sanction of A Scheme of Arrangement SCS 8-Mar-2006
Sanction had been sought for a scheme of arrangement on the winding up of an insurance company. There were objections. The original scheme had been proposed under English law, and it would be inappropriate for a Scottish court to try to sanction . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Scotland, Legal Professions

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.238926

The Law Society of the United Kingdom v Waterlow Brothers and Layton: HL 1883

There was a claim that there had been a breach of section 2 of the 1843 Act by law stationers (who had had various dealings with the Probate registry under the supervision of solicitors). The Rules of the Probate Court required applications for probate to be made, if not by the executor, then by a proctor, solicitor or attorney.
Held: If some step in a proceeding is required to be done only by the party or his solicitor, then if that step is taken by an unqualified person (not being the party), that person will necessarily be acting as a solicitor within the meaning of section 2 of the 1843 Act. such an application was ‘a solicitor’s or proctor’s business’. The claim was dismissed. The stationers were simply executing instructions to do ministerial acts in order to save the real solicitor from the trouble and expense of doing them: they had not been practising as solicitors themselves. In considering whether there had been a breach of section 2, the House of Lords proceeded on the footing that to act as a solicitor is to do what may only be done by a qualified practitioner. Lord Bramwell: ‘I am of the opinion that they have not; and I am of opinion that they have not because they have not; and really that is the only answer which one can give . . ‘

Judges:

Lord Bramwell

Citations:

(1883) 8 App Cas 407

Statutes:

Solicitors Act 1843 2

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedAndre Agassi v S Robinson (H M Inspector of Taxes) (No 2) CA 2-Dec-2005
The taxpayer had been represented in proceedings throughout by tax law experts, Tenon Media, who were not legally admitted, but had a right to conduct litigation under the 1990 Act. The Inspector objected to paying costs as if the representatives . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Wills and Probate

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.237581

Dooley v The Law Society (No 1): ChD 15 Sep 2000

When considering an application for the Law Society to be ordered to withdraw an intevention in a solicitor’s practice, the court undertakes a two stage process: ‘First it must decide whether the grounds under paragraph 1 are made out; in this case, primarily whether there are grounds for suspecting dishonesty. Secondly, if the Court is so satisfied, then it must consider whether in the light of all the evidence before it the intervention should continue. In deciding the second question, the Court must carry out a balancing exercise between the need in the public interest to protect the public from dishonest solicitors and the inevitably very serious consequences if the intervention continues.’

Judges:

Neuberger J

Citations:

Unreported, 15 September 2000

Statutes:

Solicitors Act 1974

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHolder v Law Society CA 24-Jan-2003
The Society had intervened in the applicant’s legal practice. He complained that the intervention was disproportionate, and by removing his right to enjoyment of his possession, infringed his human rights. The Society appealed the finding that an . .
CitedSimms and others v The Law Society CA 12-Jul-2005
The appellant challenged intervention proceedings brought against his solicitors practice by the respondent. Following disciplinary proceedings, the Society had obtained summary judgment rejecting the application, and awarding costs. The solicitor . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.228470

In re Massey and Carey: 1884

A solicitor cannot recover his costs from his client where his negligence has rendered the work ineffective.

Citations:

(1884) 26 ChD 459

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHeywood v Wellers CA 1976
The claimant instructed solicitors in injunction proceedings which they conducted negligently. The solicitors had put the case in the hands of an incompetent junior clerk. She sued acting in person, and succeeded but now appealed the only limited . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.226984

Bhandari v Advocates Committee: PC 1956

Complaints of professional misconduct against a member of a legal profession are to be proved to the criminal standard. Lord Tucker said: ‘With regard to the onus of proof the Court of Appeal [for East Africa] said: ‘We agree that in every allegation of professional misconduct involving an element of deceit or moral turpitude a high standard of proof is called for, and we cannot envisage any body of professional men sitting in judgment on a colleague who would be content to condemn on a mere balance of probabilities.’ This seems to their Lordships an adequate description of the duty of a tribunal such as the Advocates Committee and there is no reason to think that either the Committee or the Supreme Court applied any lower standard of proof.’

Judges:

Lord Tucker

Citations:

[1956] 1 WLR 1442

Cited by:

ApprovedIn Re A Solicitor QBD 13-May-1992
In disciplinary proceedings before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal, allegations must be proved to the criminal standard, and certainly so where the allegations are serious and may result in suspension or disqualification. Hearsay evidence . .
CitedCampbell v Hamlet (as executrix of Simon Alexander) PC 25-Apr-2005
(Trinidad and Tobago) The appellant was an attorney. A complaint was made that he had been given money to buy land, but neither had the land been conveyed nor the money returned. The complaint began in 1988, but final speeches were not heard until . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.226042

Stewart v Secretary of State for Scotland: IHCS 1996

The House considered the test of unfitness of a Sherriff: ‘. . what has to be shown is that he is not really capable of performing the proper function of a judge at all.’

Judges:

Lord Coulsfield

Citations:

1996 SLT 1203

Citing:

Appealed toStewart v Secretary of State for Scotland (Scotland) HL 22-Jan-1998
The dismissal of a Scottish Sheriff ‘for inability’ is not limited in meaning to either mental or physical infirmity, but can also include simple incompetence. The fact that the inquiry into the sherriff’s unfitness was conducted in private was not . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromStewart v Secretary of State for Scotland (Scotland) HL 22-Jan-1998
The dismissal of a Scottish Sheriff ‘for inability’ is not limited in meaning to either mental or physical infirmity, but can also include simple incompetence. The fact that the inquiry into the sherriff’s unfitness was conducted in private was not . .
CitedMeerabux v The Attorney General of Belize PC 23-Mar-2005
(Belize) The applicant complained at his removal as a justice of the Supreme Court, stating it was unconstitutional. The complaint had been decided by a member of the Bar Council which had also recommended his removal, and he said it had been . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.223951

The Law Society v The Master of the Rolls, Michael A Shuman: QBD 10 Feb 2005

The solicitor had been a registered Texan lawyer, who re-registered in England in 1999. After matters were referred to the disciplinary comitteee it was sought to impose conditions upon his registration.
Held: Any conditions on the registration of a foreign lawyer could be applied only at the time of registration, and not subsequently. The power had been circumscribed in respect of all solicitors and no general additional power was to be inferred in respect of foreign registered lawyers.

Judges:

Mr Justice Richards Lord Justice Thomas Fulford, Mr Justice Fulford

Citations:

Times 21-Feb-2005

Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.222959

Re Baron Investments (Holdings) Ltd: 2001

Conflict of interest – double employment

Citations:

[2001] 1 BCLC 2722

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMarks and Spencer plc v Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer (A Firm) ChD 2-Jun-2004
The claimant sought an injunction preventing the respondent form of solicitors acting for a client in a bid for the claimant, saying that the firm was continuing to act for it, and that a conflict of interest arose.
Held: Though the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.200340

Regina v Maidstone Crown Court ex parte Waitt: QBD 1988

The solicitor applicant challenged the grant of a search order under section 9.
Held: The order was quashed. The court underlined the need for judges to be scrupulous in discharging their responsibilities so as to ensure that use of the procedures, which constitute a serious inroad upon the liberty of the subject, are not abused. In addition the court made clear that fulfilment of each part of the relevant conditions is a matter of substance. The reasons for authorising the seizure must be made clear and applications without notice must be fully justified. As to section 9: ‘The special procedure under section 9 and schedule 1 is a serious inroad upon the liberty of the subject. The responsibility for ensuring that the procedure is not abused lies with circuit judges. It is of cardinal importance that circuit judges should be scrupulous in discharging that responsibility. The responsibility is greatest when the circuit judge is asked to issue a warrant under paragraph 12. It is essential that the reason for authorising the seizure is made clear. The preferred method of obtaining material for a police investigation should always be by way of an inter partes order under paragraph 4, after notice of application has been served under paragraph 8. An ex parte application under paragraph 12 must never become a matter of common form and satisfaction as to fulfilment of the conditions is an important matter of substance.’

Judges:

Lloyd LJ

Citations:

[1988] Crim LR 384

Statutes:

Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 10

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMiller Gardner Solicitors, Regina (on the Application of) v Minshull Street Crown Court Admn 20-Dec-2002
Police investigating crime obtained a warrant to search a solicitor’s offices for details of their clients. The solicitors appealed.
Held: The details required, namely dates of contacts with a certain telephone number were not legally . .
CitedRegina v Lewes Crown Court and Chief Constable of Sussex Police ex parte Nigel Weller and Co Admn 12-May-1999
The applicant sought judicial review of a decision to grant a search warrant in respect of his offices, saying that the material covered was protected by legal privilege. The warrant had been unavailable under section 8 because of the privilege, and . .
CitedRegina v Lewes Crown Court ex parte Hill 1991
Bingham LJ said: ‘The Police and Criminal Evidence Act governs a field in which there are two very obvious public interests. There is, first of all, a public interest in the effective investigation and prosecution of crime. Secondly, there is a . .
CitedFaisaltex Ltd and others, Regina (on the Application of) v Crown Court Sitting at Preston and others etc Admn 21-Nov-2008
Nine claimants sought leave to bring judicial review of the issue of search warrants against solicitors’ and business and other premises, complaining of the seizure of excluded material and of special procedure material. There were suspicions of the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Criminal Practice

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.197743

Regina v Leeds Crown Court ex parte Switalski: 1991

It is preferable, in an ordinary case, for an application for a search warrant in a solicitor’s office to be made on notice. However, if a solicitor under investigation were to have knowledge of what was contemplated the material sought might disappear or be tampered with before it could be seen by the investigator, a judge might be persuaded that an ex parte application was appropriate and necessary.
Neill LJ said: ‘There is . . . a very powerful argument in support of the proposition that a warrant issued under section 9 schedule 1 of the 1984 Act should, however wide its scope, contain some express condition to exclude items subject to legal privilege.’

Judges:

Judge Savill QC, Neill LJ

Citations:

[1991] COD 119, (1991) CLR 559

Statutes:

Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 10

Cited by:

CitedMiller Gardner Solicitors, Regina (on the Application of) v Minshull Street Crown Court Admn 20-Dec-2002
Police investigating crime obtained a warrant to search a solicitor’s offices for details of their clients. The solicitors appealed.
Held: The details required, namely dates of contacts with a certain telephone number were not legally . .
CitedRegina v Lewes Crown Court and Chief Constable of Sussex Police ex parte Nigel Weller and Co Admn 12-May-1999
The applicant sought judicial review of a decision to grant a search warrant in respect of his offices, saying that the material covered was protected by legal privilege. The warrant had been unavailable under section 8 because of the privilege, and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Criminal Practice, Police, Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.197744

The Palermo: 1883

A copy of an original document which is not itself privileged is privileged only if (a) the copy came into existence for the purpose of litigation, and (b) the original document is not and has not at any time been in the control of the party claiming privilege.

Citations:

(1883) 9 PD 6

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedSumitomo Corporation v Credit Lyonnais Rouse Limited CA 20-Jul-2001
Documents had been translated from the Japanese, for the purposes of the litigation. The claimant refused disclosure, arguing that they were privileged, and protected from disclosure, having been prepared for the court proceedings.
Held: The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Evidence, Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.196686

Duchess of Argyll v Beuselinck: ChD 1972

The court found that the plaintiff’s solicitor had not been under a duty to give tax advice in the context of the particular transaction. The performance must be judged in the light of the events known at the time. The court advised against the use of hindsight.
Megarry J said: ‘In this world there are few things that could not have been better done if done with hindsight. The advantages of hindsight include the benefit of having a sufficient indication of which of the many factors present are important and which are unimportant. But hindsight is no touchstone [of negligence]. The standard of care to be expected of professional men must be based on events as they occur, in prospect and not in retrospect . . on any footing, the duty of care is not a warranty of perfection . . a marginal case does not make negligence.’ and ‘hindsight is not the touchstone of negligence.’

Judges:

Megarry J

Citations:

[1972] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 172

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBrinn and Another v Russell Jones and Walker (A Firm) QBD 12-Dec-2002
Police officers had instructed their solicitor to sue in defamation. By their negligence the chance of a claim was lost. They instructed a second firm of solicitors to claim against the first, but this firm also were negligent. The damages fell to . .
CitedHicks v Russell Jones and Walker (A Firm) ChD 27-Apr-2007
The claimants sought to pursue an action in negligence against their solicitors saying that they had conducted another case negligently, and thereby they had lost their chance in the action, on the basis that the hotel at the centre of the action . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Negligence, Legal Professions

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.190234

Finley v Glaxo Laboratories: 1989

Hobhouse J said: ‘I would not lend support to the adoption of an unduly low hourly rate and then seeking to put it right by applying a higher uplift percentage. The right approach is that which I have emphasised, namely to adopt a realistic approach to the hourly rate to reflect the actual cost of the fee earner involved, and then to apply an appropriate but not excessive uplift’.

Judges:

Hobhouse J

Citations:

(1989) Costs Law Reports 106

Cited by:

CitedJemma Trust Company Ltd v Liptrott, Forrester, Kippax Beaumont Lewis CA 24-Oct-2003
Solicitors sought to challenge an order disallowing a costs item for the administration of an estate which included a percentage of the estate.
Held: Despite advances in time recording, ‘we see no reason to say that it is no longer appropriate . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Costs, Legal Professions

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.187172

Cobbett v Wood: 1908

Counsel’s fees having been omitted from the solicitor’s bill as taxed, they could not later be claimed.

Judges:

Sir Gorell Barnes, Farwell LJ

Citations:

[1908] 2 KB 420

Cited by:

CitedAaron v Okoye CA 15-Jan-1998
The plaintiff solicitor had acted for the respondent barrister in legal proceedings. The respondent was unhappy with work done on her behalf by counsel instructed by the plaintiff, and declined to pay. The solicitor taxed his bill excluding . .
CitedAaron v Okoye CA 19-Mar-1997
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Costs, Legal Professions

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.183326

Black and Decker Inc v Flymo: 1991

Legal professional privilege is a right to resist the compulsory disclosure of information. ‘It is not possible to assert a right to refuse to disclose in respect of a document which has already been disclosed. Once the document has passed into the hands of the other party the question is no longer one of privilege but of admissibility.’

Judges:

Hoffmann J

Citations:

[1991] 1 WLR 753

Cited by:

CitedB and Others Russell McVeagh McKenzie Bartleet and Co v Auckland District Law Society, Gary J Judd PC 19-May-2003
(New Zealand) Solicitors resisted requests to disclose papers in breach of legal professional privilege from their professional body investigating allegations of professional misconduct against them.
Held: The appeal was allowed. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Legal Professions

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.182249

Holmes v Baddeley: HL 1844

Discussing professional legal privilege, Lord Lyndhurst said: ‘The principle upon which this rule is established is that communications between a party and his professional advisers, with a view to legal proceedings, should be unfettered; and they should not be restrained by any apprehension of such communications being afterwards divulged and made use of to his prejudice. To give full effect to this principle it is obvious that they ought to be privileged, not merely in the cause then contemplated or depending, but that the privilege ought to extend to any subsequent litigation with the same or any other party or parties.
The necessary confidence will be destroyed if it be known that the communication can be revealed at any time’

Judges:

Lord Lyndhurst LC

Citations:

(1844) 1 Ph 476

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedB and Others Russell McVeagh McKenzie Bartleet and Co v Auckland District Law Society, Gary J Judd PC 19-May-2003
(New Zealand) Solicitors resisted requests to disclose papers in breach of legal professional privilege from their professional body investigating allegations of professional misconduct against them.
Held: The appeal was allowed. The . .
CitedThree Rivers District Council and others v Governor and Company of the Bank of England (No 6) HL 11-Nov-2004
The Bank anticipated criticism in an ad hoc enquiry which was called to investigate its handling of a matter involving the claimant. The claimant sought disclosure of the documents created when the solicitors advised employees of the Bank in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.182242

Donsland Limited v Nicholas Van Hoogstraton; Barnhill Investments Limited and Selective Management Limited: CA 19 May 1999

Citations:

[1999] EWCA Civ 1434

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

See AlsoDonsland Ltd v Van Hoogstraten and others CA 23-Feb-2001
Application for leave to appeal granted – in what circumstances a solicitor’s implied authority may extend to taking steps in litigation without express instructions. . .
See AlsoDonsland Limited v Nicholas Van Hoogstraton CA 2002
Once a transaction in respect of which the solicitor was retained is completed, the retainer comes to an end, and with it the fiduciary relationship between client and solicitor. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.146349

Medcalf v Mardell and Others: CA 24 Nov 2000

Counsel who wished to insert an allegation of fraudulent activity, or similar, into an application to amend a notice of appeal, must be sure not only that they have the clear and direct instructions of the clients to do this, but also that they found available material to justify the allegation in a format in which it could be produced to court in evidence. Where such material was unavailable because the client declined to waive confidence, counsel was at risk of a wasted costs order. Counsel are immune from defamation for such matters, and accordingly must behave responsibly.

Citations:

Times 02-Jan-2001, Gazette 01-Feb-2001

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoMedcalf v Mardell and Others CA 24-Nov-2000
Counsel who wished to insert an allegation of fraudulent activity, or similar, into an application to amend a notice of appeal, must be sure not only that they have the clear and direct instructions of the clients to do this, but also that they . .
See AlsoMedcalf v Mardell and others CA 2-Mar-2000
. .

Cited by:

Appeal fromMedcalf v Mardell, Weatherill and Another HL 27-Jun-2002
The appellants were barristers against whom wasted costs orders had been made. They appealed. They had made allegations of fraud in pleadings, but without being able to provide evidence to support the allegation. This was itself a breach of the Bar . .
See AlsoMedcalf v Mardell and Others CA 24-Nov-2000
Counsel who wished to insert an allegation of fraudulent activity, or similar, into an application to amend a notice of appeal, must be sure not only that they have the clear and direct instructions of the clients to do this, but also that they . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Costs

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.135662

Walker and others v Stones and others: CA 19 Jul 2000

Beneficiaries under a trust sought damages from a solicitor trustee, and the firm of which he was a partner.
Held: Where a trustee acted in breach of trust in a claimed belief that he was acting in the interests of the beneficiaries, but no reasonable trustee in his place could have that belief, then an allegation against him of dishonesty should proceed. A trusteeship is not part of the normal duties of a partner of a firm, and the firm is not vicariously liable for the acts of a partner in such trusts. The court rejected the ‘Robin Hood’ test of dishonesty (a person is only regarded as dishonest if he transgresses his own standard of honesty, even if that standard is contrary to that of reasonable and honest people) saying: ‘A person may in some cases act dishonestly, according to the ordinary use of language, even though he genuinely believes that his action is morally justified. The penniless thief, for example, who picks the pocket of the multi-millionaire is dishonest even though he genuinely considers that theft is morally justified as a fair redistribution of wealth and that he is not therefore being dishonest.’
‘a claimant is entitled to recover damages where:
(a) the claimant can establish that the defendant’s conduct has constituted a breach of some legal duty owed to him personally (whether under the law of contract, torts, trusts or any other branch of the law) AND
(b) on its assessment of the facts, the Court is satisfied that such breach of duty has caused him personal loss, separate and distinct from any loss that may have been occasioned to any corporate body in which he may be financially interested.
I further conclude that, if these two conditions are satisfied, the mere fact that the defendant’s conduct may also have given rise to a cause of action at the suit of a company in which the claimant is financially interested (whether directly as a shareholder or indirectly as, for example, a beneficiary under a trust) will not deprive the plaintiff of his cause of action; in such a case, a plea of double jeopardy will not avail the defendant.’

Judges:

Sir Christopher Slade

Citations:

Times 26-Sep-2000, Gazette 14-Sep-2000, [2000] Lloyds Rep PN 864

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedJohnson v Gore Wood and Co HL 14-Dec-2000
Shareholder May Sue for Additional Personal Losses
A company brought a claim of negligence against its solicitors, and, after that claim was settled, the company’s owner brought a separate claim in respect of the same subject-matter.
Held: It need not be an abuse of the court for a shareholder . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Company, Legal Professions, Trusts, Equity, Vicarious Liability

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.90254

Weston v Law Society: CA 15 Jul 1998

A solicitor whose partner had taken charge of accounts and had defaulted remained himself properly subject to discipline under the Solicitors Act. The duty falling on solicitors is very high when dealing with client funds. The striking off of a solicitor found to have acted dishonestly in relation to client funds must be automatic.

Citations:

Times 15-Jul-1998

Statutes:

Solicitors Act 1974

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLaw Society v Bultitude CA 16-Dec-2004
The solicitor had committed breaches of the accounts rules. The Society appealed an order suspending him from practice for two years.
Held: Many solicitors who had improper recourse to client funds intended to repay those sums. Striking off . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.90433

Davies v Davies: CA 2000

The wife had objected to the instruction by her former husband of a solicitor who had been instructed by her some seven years previously. She withdrew her objection, but the court now considered an appeal as regards costs.
Held: The court considered the possible subconscious influence on a lawyer having acted before for a party.

Judges:

Sir Stephen Brown P, Robert Johnson J

Citations:

[2000] 1 FLR 39

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

ApprovedPrince Jefri Bolkiah v KPMG (A Firm) HL 16-Dec-1998
Conflicts of Duty with former Client
The House was asked as to the duties of the respondent accountants (KPMG). KPMG had information confidential to a former client, the appellant, which might be relevant to instructions which they then accepted from the Brunei Investment Agency, of . .

Cited by:

CitedZS v FS (Application To Prevent Solicitor Acting) FD 24-Oct-2017
Discosure of Confidences must be at risk
H sought to restrain W’s solicitors from acting. The firm was one of six firms approached to consider representing H, and he now said that certain matters had been diviluged to the firm.
Held: The legal principles were clear, and it was for H . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Costs

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.599588

Re T v A, (children, risk of disclosure): 2000

Citations:

[2000] 1 FLR 859

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedZS v FS (Application To Prevent Solicitor Acting) FD 24-Oct-2017
Discosure of Confidences must be at risk
H sought to restrain W’s solicitors from acting. The firm was one of six firms approached to consider representing H, and he now said that certain matters had been diviluged to the firm.
Held: The legal principles were clear, and it was for H . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.599589

Maguire v Makaronis: 25 Jun 1997

High Court of Australia – Equity – Fiduciary duties – Solicitor and client relationship – Mortgage by clients in favour of solicitors – Ascertainment of particular fiduciary duties.
Equity – Equitable remedies – Rescission – Relevance of causal connection between breach of fiduciary duty and execution of mortgage – Scope of equity for rescission – Whether clients required to ‘do equity’ by honouring contractual obligation to pay principal and interest secured by mortgage – Rate of interest payable on principal sum outstanding under mortgage.
Legal practitioners – Solicitor and client relationship – Mortgage by clients in favour of solicitors – Fiduciary duties – Equitable remedies.
‘In Australia, the measure of compensation in respect of losses sustained by reason of breach of duty by a trustee or other fiduciary is determined by equitable principles and . . these do not necessarily reflect the rules for assessment of damages in tort or contract.’

Judges:

Brennan CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow, Kirby JJ

Citations:

(1997) 188 CLR 449, [1997] HCA 23, (1997) 144 ALR 729, (1997) 71 ALJR 781

Links:

Austlii

Cited by:

CitedAIB Group (UK) Plc v Mark Redler and Co Solicitors SC 5-Nov-2014
Bank not to recover more than its losses
The court was asked as to the remedy available to the appellant bank against the respondent, a firm of solicitors, for breach of the solicitors’ custodial duties in respect of money entrusted to them for the purpose of completing a loan which was to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Equity, Legal Professions, Damages

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.554208

Bottomley v Brougham: 1908

The official receiver is acting in a judicial capacity in making his report and his further report and in conducting the examination under that further report. A judge is privileged from inquiry as to whether he is malicious. Channell J considered whether the OR in carrying out investigative functions came within the doctrine of absolute privilege. He held: ‘I think, in the first place, that the official receiver has a statutory duty to inquire in a judicial way into certain matters by the Act of 1890, and that in performing that duty he is acting in a judicial capacity. It is quite true that the report is made ex parte, but that makes no difference. A judge in hearing an ex parte application is still acting as a judge, and the absolute privilege applies quite as much as when he is hearing a case in which both parties appear. The fact that this was a preliminary inquiry equally does not prevent it being a judicial enquiry. An inquiry before a magistrate on a charge of murder, for instance, which he has certainly no power to deal with, and as to which he is only inquiring in a preliminary way whether there is a case for committing the accused person for trial, is clearly a judicial proceeding although it is preliminary to trial. It is strongly contended on the part of the plaintiff that there is mischief and danger in allowing absolute privilege in this case, because it is an ex parte statement, and the person against whom the charge is made has no opportunity of meeting it; it appears to me, however, that the answer to that is the very fact that it is preliminary, and that it does lead to further inquiry upon which that person does have that opportunity of explaining and giving his view of the matter, and that, it being obviously known by anybody who sees or reads the report of the official receiver that, qua report, it will lead to future proceedings in which the report may be entirely displaced, that really prevents any serious mischief arising from applying this doctrine to such a proceeding as this. I think, therefore, that this report may be considered to be absolutely privileged on the footing of its being the judgment of a judicial officer upon a matter entrusted to him for inquiry’.
However Channell J went on to give an alternative ground for holding that the OR attracted absolute privilege which proceeded on the arguably opposite premise that the function which the OR was exercising was more analogous to that of a prosecutor than a judge: ‘But, even if that is not sound, there is the further ground that the report of the official receiver may be treated, not so much as the judgment in a judicial proceeding, but as the initial stage of proceedings in the winding-up Court, which clearly is a Court. It is the information upon which the proceedings take place and it is made by the official receiver under a statutory duty. It seems to me to come within the authority of the case of Lilley v Roney 61 L.J. (Q.B.) 727, and to be a much stronger case, because in that case complaint by a person who considered himself aggrieved by the conduct of a solicitor – a complaint which was the initiation of proceedings before the Law Society – was held to be privileged as being the commencement of proceedings of a legal character. I quite agree that there the privilege was rather the privilege of a litigant than the privilege of the judge; it was the privilege of a man who was starting proceedings. It is perhaps not quite accurate to say the official receiver is in any sense a litigant, but when he comes before the winding-up Court upon the examination no doubt he is, in one sense, a party to the proceedings; he is, as it were, appearing for the prosecution. It is much the same as when the Attorney-General appears upon an information filed by the Attorney-General; he is then a party to the proceedings possibly, not a litigant, and I should say certainly not acting as a judge, but I do not see that that much affects the matter here. In presenting this report the official receiver is informing the Court of alleged matters for inquiry, and so initiating a judicial enquiry; and it seems to me to be entirely analogous to what was held to be absolute privilege in Lilley v Roney, and to be a stronger case. It was done in the course of the performance of a duty imposed upon him in his position of officer of the Court. It is much like the report of an official referee, or someone of that sort, to whom matters are referred to report to the Court. I suppose no one would doubt that those reports were privileged.’

Judges:

Channell J

Citations:

[1908] 1 KB 584

Cited by:

CitedMore v Weaver CA 11-Jul-1928
The appellant brought the latest of several actions, this time alleging defamation in letters from the respondent to her own solicitors making certain statements about the appellant. Those letters had become public in the course of the earlier . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Insolvency, Defamation

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.552688

Nationwide Building Society v Balmore Radmore: ChD 1999

Although the Bowerman duty is a species of obligation which the court will ordinarily imply where a solicitor acts for a lender, it will not imply such an obligation when to do so is inconsistent with the express terms of the retainer or with the surrounding circumstances of the relationship

Judges:

Blackburne J

Citations:

[1999] 1 Lloyd’s Rep PN 241, per

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedMortgage Express Ltd v Bowerman and Partners (A Firm) CA 1-Aug-1995
A solicitor acting for both a lender and a borrower was under a duty to disclose relevant information to the lender client. An incident of their duty to exercise reasonable care and skill, solicitors are obliged to advise their lender client in . .

Cited by:

CitedE.Surv Ltd v Goldsmith Williams Solicitors ChD 10-Apr-2014
The claimants had been found liable for mis-valuation of a property. They now sought a contribution from the solicitors acting uunder the mortgage saying that had they acted properly, they would have alerted the lender, and in turn the claimant of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Professional Negligence

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.523690

Re Cathcart, ex parte Campbell: CA 1869

The court considered a request for an order that a solicitor should reveal his client’s address.
Held: James LJ said: ‘If, indeed, the gentleman’s residence had been concealed; if he was in hiding for some reason or other, and the solicitor had said, ‘I only know my client’s residence because he has communicated it to me confidentially, as his solicitor, for the purpose of being advised by me, and he has not communicated it to the rest of the world’, then the client’s residence would have been a matter of professional confidence; but the mere statement by the solicitor, that he knows the residence only in consequence of his professional employment, is not sufficient.’

Judges:

James LJ

Citations:

(1869-70) LR 5 Ch App 703

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedSRJ v Person(s) Unknown (Author and Commenters of Internet Blogs) QBD 10-Jul-2014
The claimant sought an order for the disclosure by his solicitor of the identity of the author of an internet blog publishing critical material which, the claimant said, was its confidential information. The defendant’s solicitor had failed to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.534163

Rowe and Maw (a firm) v Customs and Excise Commissioners: QBD 1975

The Court considered two items of expenditure by a solicitor on his own travel expenses. In one case the expenditure related to travel to a Crown Court in connection with the defence of a client; in the other the expenditure was incurred in travelling to Rotterdam in connection with the sale of shares by a client.
Held: In neither case did the expenditure constitute a disbursement made on behalf of the clients. Wien J, adopting the VAT tribunal’s views, said: ‘In our view that supply consisted of what we may comprehensively call the legal services rendered by the appellants in connection with the proposed sale, some of which had to be rendered in Rotterdam and could only be so rendered if a member of the firm travelled there for the purpose. He concluded that the nature of the services provided by the solicitor necessarily involved expenditure on travel tickets, which was a cost component of his services, saying that the expenditure was ‘something which is not strictly a payment that the client has asked for, either expressly or impliedly, but is part of the whole legal services rendered by the solicitor for which there is a consideration’.
Bridge J, concurring, identified a class of cases ‘where the goods or services purchased are supplied to the solicitor, as here in the form of travel tickets, to enable him effectively to perform the service supplied to his client, in this case to travel to the place where the solicitor’s service is required to be performed. In such case, in whatever form the solicitor recovers such expenditure from his client, whether as a separately itemised expense or as part of an inclusive overall fee, value added tax is payable because the payment is part of the consideration which the client pays for the service supplied by the solicitor.’

Judges:

Bridge J, Wien J, Eveleigh J

Citations:

[1975] STC 340

Cited by:

CitedBarratt, Goff and Tomlinson and The Law Society As Intervenor v Revenue and Customs FTTTx 20-Jan-2011
FTTTx VAT – disbursements – whether fees paid for medical records and medico-legal reports by solicitors acting for clients in personal injury and medical negligence claims disbursements and thus outside scope of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Costs, VAT

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.463690

Barratt v Gough-Thomas: 1951

Citations:

[1951] Ch 242

Cited by:

CitedWithers Llp v Rybak and Others ChD 9-May-2011
The claimant solicitors sought a declaration as to whether they had a right to assert a solicitor’s common law lien over sums in its client account. The defendant clients had asserted a security interest in the money and had assigned that interest, . .
CitedWithers Llp v Rybak and Others ChD 9-May-2011
The claimant solicitors sought a declaration as to whether they had a right to assert a solicitor’s common law lien over sums in its client account. The defendant clients had asserted a security interest in the money and had assigned that interest, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.439584

Barnardiston v Soam (No 2): 1685

Citations:

[1685] EngR 215, (1685) 3 Keb 419, (1685) 84 ER 798 (D)

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 1) 1685
. .

Cited by:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 3) 1685
Offly for the plaintiff, that debt lieth pending error n 22 H, 6, 38, being a new original, which the Court agreed ; and a respondeas ouster ; and notwithstanding it was affirmed that judgment in debt pending error here was reversed in Exchequer . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 4) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soame 1702
On the death of Sir Henry North, one of the knights for Suffolk ; a writ was issued forth for the election of a new member, and Sir Samuel Barnardiston and my Lord Huntingtowre were the two candidates ; but Sir Samuel carried it by 78 voices, and . .
See AlsoSir William Soames v Sir Sam Barnardiston 1826
Action on the case lies not against a sheriff for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel, Barnardiston v Sir Will Soames 1826
Whether an action on the case lies at common law against the sheriff for maliciously making a double return upon a writ to elect a member of Parliament. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel Barnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Elections

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.396990

Barnardiston v Soam (No 1): 1685

Citations:

[1685] EngR 216, (1685) 3 Keb 389, (1685) 84 ER 783

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 3) 1685
Offly for the plaintiff, that debt lieth pending error n 22 H, 6, 38, being a new original, which the Court agreed ; and a respondeas ouster ; and notwithstanding it was affirmed that judgment in debt pending error here was reversed in Exchequer . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 4) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soame 1702
On the death of Sir Henry North, one of the knights for Suffolk ; a writ was issued forth for the election of a new member, and Sir Samuel Barnardiston and my Lord Huntingtowre were the two candidates ; but Sir Samuel carried it by 78 voices, and . .
See AlsoSir William Soames v Sir Sam Barnardiston 1826
Action on the case lies not against a sheriff for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel, Barnardiston v Sir Will Soames 1826
Whether an action on the case lies at common law against the sheriff for maliciously making a double return upon a writ to elect a member of Parliament. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel Barnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Elections

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.396991

Barnardiston v Soam (No 4): 1685

Citations:

[1685] EngR 214, (1685) 3 Keb 442, (1685) 84 ER 812 (D)

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 1) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 3) 1685
Offly for the plaintiff, that debt lieth pending error n 22 H, 6, 38, being a new original, which the Court agreed ; and a respondeas ouster ; and notwithstanding it was affirmed that judgment in debt pending error here was reversed in Exchequer . .

Cited by:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soame 1702
On the death of Sir Henry North, one of the knights for Suffolk ; a writ was issued forth for the election of a new member, and Sir Samuel Barnardiston and my Lord Huntingtowre were the two candidates ; but Sir Samuel carried it by 78 voices, and . .
See AlsoSir William Soames v Sir Sam Barnardiston 1826
Action on the case lies not against a sheriff for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel, Barnardiston v Sir Will Soames 1826
Whether an action on the case lies at common law against the sheriff for maliciously making a double return upon a writ to elect a member of Parliament. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel Barnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Elections, Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.396989

Barnardiston v Soame: 1702

On the death of Sir Henry North, one of the knights for Suffolk ; a writ was issued forth for the election of a new member, and Sir Samuel Barnardiston and my Lord Huntingtowre were the two candidates ; but Sir Samuel carried it by 78 voices, and was returned ; and my Lord Huntingtowre having made an interest with the sheriff, got the sheriff to return him too, and he sat in the House till the election was there determined for Sir Samuel : whereupon Sir Samuel Barnardiston, for this double return, brought an action upon the case against the sheriff, and tried it at the King’s Bench Bar, 12 Nov. 1674, before my Lord Chief Justice Hale, and recovered 1000l damages : and afterwards a writ of error was brought in the Exchequer-Chamber, and there the judgment in the King’s-Bench was reversed :
North CJ said: ‘They who are intrusted to judge, ought to be free from vexation, that they may determine without fear; the law requires courage in a judge, and therefore provides security for the support of that courage.’

Judges:

North CJ

Citations:

[1702] EngR 9, (1702) Pollex 470, (1702) 86 ER 615

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 1) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 3) 1685
Offly for the plaintiff, that debt lieth pending error n 22 H, 6, 38, being a new original, which the Court agreed ; and a respondeas ouster ; and notwithstanding it was affirmed that judgment in debt pending error here was reversed in Exchequer . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 4) 1685
. .

Cited by:

See AlsoSir William Soames v Sir Sam Barnardiston 1826
Action on the case lies not against a sheriff for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel, Barnardiston v Sir Will Soames 1826
Whether an action on the case lies at common law against the sheriff for maliciously making a double return upon a writ to elect a member of Parliament. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel Barnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
CitedMore v Weaver CA 11-Jul-1928
The appellant brought the latest of several actions, this time alleging defamation in letters from the respondent to her own solicitors making certain statements about the appellant. Those letters had become public in the course of the earlier . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Elections

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.392226

Sir William Soames v Sir Sam Barnardiston: 1826

Action on the case lies not against a sheriff for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ.

Citations:

[1826] EngR 556, (1826) Freem KB 430, (1826) 89 ER 321

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 1) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 3) 1685
Offly for the plaintiff, that debt lieth pending error n 22 H, 6, 38, being a new original, which the Court agreed ; and a respondeas ouster ; and notwithstanding it was affirmed that judgment in debt pending error here was reversed in Exchequer . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 4) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soame 1702
On the death of Sir Henry North, one of the knights for Suffolk ; a writ was issued forth for the election of a new member, and Sir Samuel Barnardiston and my Lord Huntingtowre were the two candidates ; but Sir Samuel carried it by 78 voices, and . .

Cited by:

CitedSir Samuel, Barnardiston v Sir Will Soames 1826
Whether an action on the case lies at common law against the sheriff for maliciously making a double return upon a writ to elect a member of Parliament. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel Barnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Elections

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.325320

Barnardiston v Soames: 1826

Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J

Citations:

[1826] EngR 46, (1826) Freem KB 387, (1826) 89 ER 287 (C)

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 1) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 3) 1685
Offly for the plaintiff, that debt lieth pending error n 22 H, 6, 38, being a new original, which the Court agreed ; and a respondeas ouster ; and notwithstanding it was affirmed that judgment in debt pending error here was reversed in Exchequer . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 4) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soame 1702
On the death of Sir Henry North, one of the knights for Suffolk ; a writ was issued forth for the election of a new member, and Sir Samuel Barnardiston and my Lord Huntingtowre were the two candidates ; but Sir Samuel carried it by 78 voices, and . .
See AlsoSir William Soames v Sir Sam Barnardiston 1826
Action on the case lies not against a sheriff for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel, Barnardiston v Sir Will Soames 1826
Whether an action on the case lies at common law against the sheriff for maliciously making a double return upon a writ to elect a member of Parliament. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel Barnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Elections

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.324810

Sir Samuel Barnardiston v Soames: 1826

Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J

Citations:

[1826] EngR 550, (1826) Freem KB 390, (1826) 89 ER 290 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 1) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 3) 1685
Offly for the plaintiff, that debt lieth pending error n 22 H, 6, 38, being a new original, which the Court agreed ; and a respondeas ouster ; and notwithstanding it was affirmed that judgment in debt pending error here was reversed in Exchequer . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 4) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soame 1702
On the death of Sir Henry North, one of the knights for Suffolk ; a writ was issued forth for the election of a new member, and Sir Samuel Barnardiston and my Lord Huntingtowre were the two candidates ; but Sir Samuel carried it by 78 voices, and . .
See AlsoSir William Soames v Sir Sam Barnardiston 1826
Action on the case lies not against a sheriff for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ. . .
See AlsoSir Samuel, Barnardiston v Sir Will Soames 1826
Whether an action on the case lies at common law against the sheriff for maliciously making a double return upon a writ to elect a member of Parliament. . .

Cited by:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Elections

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.325314

Sir Samuel, Barnardiston v Sir Will Soames: 1826

Whether an action on the case lies at common law against the sheriff for maliciously making a double return upon a writ to elect a member of Parliament.

Citations:

[1826] EngR 551, (1826) Freem KB 380, (1826) 89 ER 283 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 1) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 3) 1685
Offly for the plaintiff, that debt lieth pending error n 22 H, 6, 38, being a new original, which the Court agreed ; and a respondeas ouster ; and notwithstanding it was affirmed that judgment in debt pending error here was reversed in Exchequer . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soam (No 4) 1685
. .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soame 1702
On the death of Sir Henry North, one of the knights for Suffolk ; a writ was issued forth for the election of a new member, and Sir Samuel Barnardiston and my Lord Huntingtowre were the two candidates ; but Sir Samuel carried it by 78 voices, and . .
CitedSir William Soames v Sir Sam Barnardiston 1826
Action on the case lies not against a sheriff for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ. . .

Cited by:

See AlsoSir Samuel Barnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
See AlsoBarnardiston v Soames 1826
Case lies against the sheriff at common law for making a double return to a Parliamentary writ falsely, maliciously, and with intent to put the pIaintiff to expense. Disseni, Rainsford J . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Elections

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.325315

Connolly v Harrington (Liquidator of Chelmsford City Football Club (1980) Ltd: 17 May 2002

An application for the assessment of a solicitors bill may be made informally.

Citations:

Unreported, 17 May 2002

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedTruex v Toll ChD 6-Mar-2009
The bankrupt appealed against an order in bankruptcy made against her on application by her former solicitors in respect of their unpaid costs. The bankrupt said that since the bill was yet untaxed, it might be altered and could not base a statutory . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.317859

In Re Strother, A Solicitor And In Re The Act 6 and 7 Vict c 73: 11 Jul 1857

The Act 10 and 11 Vict. s. 69 does not deprive this Court of its jurisdiction to order taxation of a solicitor’s bill of costs for Parliamentary business. To entitle a client to an order for taxation of his solicitor’s bill of costs after the expiration of twelve months from its delivery he must shew either pressure or gross overcharge, amounting to what this Court designates as fraud. But it is not necessary to shew both.

Citations:

[1857] EngR 761, 7 Vict c 73, (1857) 69 ER 1214

Links:

Commonlii

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.290507

Talbot v Marshfield: 15 Jun 1865

Trustees took counsel’s opinion as to whether they should exercise a discretionary power to advance part of their trust fund for the benefit of some of the cestuis que trust: and others of the cestuis que trust having filed a bill to restrain them from exercising such discretion, they took a second opinion as to their defence in the suit.
Upon summons for production by the Plaintiffs :
Held, that, the first case and opinion having reference to the dealings with the trust estate, all the cestuis que trust had a right to inspection, and the Court ordered them to be produced ; but that the second case and opinion being after suit instituted, the Plaintiffs had no right to production.

Citations:

[1865] EngR 589, (1865) 2 Dr and Sm 549, (1865) 62 ER 728

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoTalbot v Marshfield 17-Nov-1864
Payment into Curt. Discretionary Power in Trustees Over Fund, – Although the mere existence of a discretionary power in trustees over a fund affords no reason why the Court should not order payment of the fund into Court, unless such payment into . .

Cited by:

CitedDawson-Damer and Others v Taylor Wessing Llp and Others ChD 6-Aug-2015
The clamants sought orders under the 1998 Act for disclosure of documents about them by the defendant solicitors and others. The defendants said that the request would require the consideration of a very large number of documents, considering in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Trusts, Litigation Practice, Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.281501

In re Gray: 1901

The tenant of a mine was liable to pay the landlord’s costs of the grant of the lease. The tenant’s liability was based on custom, which required the tenant to pay the costs of drawing, settling and completing the lease. The tenant asked for an assessment of the bill of costs. The bill included a disbursement relating to fees paid to a mining expert.
Held: The court’s jurisdiction over solicitors as it officers is compensatory and not punitive, it retains a disciplinary slant to act ‘to enforce honourable conduct on the part of the Court’s own officers.’
Cozens-Hardy J said: ‘Now, it is well settled that the bill to be taxed is the bill between the solicitor and his own client; and that the third party can only tax it on the condition of paying what is due to the solicitor from his own client, which may be more than the client, if he had paid it, could have recovered over from the third party.’

Judges:

Cozens-Hardy J

Citations:

[1901] 1 Ch 239

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See asloRe Gray v Coles 1891
North J said that there should be a special retainer to defend a suit as well as to institute it. There is power for the court to make an order setting aside an appearance the entry of which has not been authorised.
the court, having a . .

Cited by:

CitedUdall v Capri Lighting Ltd (in liquidation) CA 1987
A claim was made for the price of goods sold and delivered. The defendant’s solicitor gave an oral undertaking to his counterpart to procure the execution by directors of his client company of charges over their homes in return for an adjournment . .
CitedAngel Solicitors v Jenkins O’Dowd and Barth ChD 19-Jan-2009
Actions were brought to enforce undertakings given by solicitors to redeem mortgages on the sale of properties, and as to redemption figures provided by lenders who then refused to release the properties. The solicitors had replied to standard form . .
CitedTim Martin Interiors Ltd v Akin Gump Llp ChD 17-Nov-2010
The company borrowed money from a bank, who instructed the defendants to act in the loan. On recovering the loan, the borrowers challenged the amounts charged by the solicitors. The court was asked what were the powers for a third party paying a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.280267

Dubai Aluminium Company Limited v Salaam and others: CA 7 Apr 2000

The liability of a firm for the wrongful acts of one partner is not limited to tortious acts creating liability in common law, but includes all wrongful acts or omissions, including a knowing assistance in a fraudulent scheme. A solicitor who prepares documents for use in a fraudulent scheme, and gives supporting advice, unbeknown to his partners, is acting outside the ordinary course of business, and his partners are not vicariously liable for his acts.

Judges:

Evans, Aldous LJJ, Turner J

Citations:

Times 21-Apr-2000, [2000] 3 WLR 910, [2000] EWCA Civ 118, [2000] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 168, [2001] QB 113, [2000] PNLR 578, [2000] Lloyd’s Rep PN 497

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Partnership Act 1890 10

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromDubai Aluminium Company Ltd v Salaam and Others QBD 17-Jul-1998
A partner is vicariously liable for the acts of his partner in equity as well as in tort. Where a partner acted as accessory to a breach of trust he acted as a constructive trustee. A settlement of and action on this basis was enforceable in a later . .
See AlsoDubai Aluminium Co Ltd v Al Alawi and Others ComC 3-Dec-1998
The claimants had brought proceedings against their former sales manager for accepting bribes and secret commission from outsiders. In support of their claim the claimants had obtained a search and seizure order and a worldwide freezing injunction, . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromDubai Aluminium Company Limited v Salaam and Others HL 5-Dec-2002
Partners Liable for Dishonest Act of Solicitor
A solicitor had been alleged to have acted dishonestly, having assisted in a fraudulent breach of trust by drafting certain documents. Contributions to the damages were sought from his partners.
Held: The acts complained of were so close to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Company, Legal Professions, Vicarious Liability

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.147151

Regina v Nasser: CA 19 Feb 1998

Where counsel who was freshly instructed on an appeal wanting to criticise counsel who had acted in the lower court, he must act in accordance with the applicable Bar Council guidance.

Citations:

Times 19-Feb-1998

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Legal Professions

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.87412

Jewo Ferrous Bv v Lewis Moore (A Firm): CA 21 Dec 2000

Where the judge had listened to the evidence of a careful and competent solicitor, as to which of two companies he considered that he was instructed by, and had decided accordingly, an appeal court should not substitute its own view for that factual assessment. In this case, the issue was what the solicitor thought, and not want the companies had intended. The delivery of the fee note was powerful but not conclusive evidence as to who was the actual client.

Citations:

Times 21-Dec-2000

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.82522

In R H (A Minor) (Court Bundles: Disallowance of Fees): CA 6 Jun 2000

The court’s practice direction on the provision of bundles and the specification of what the bundles should contain in Family Division cases, a warning to practitioners that they would have little by way of answer to a wasted costs order. The shorter the appointment the greater the need for appropriate bundles, and the judge should not be expected to have to rely upon the court papers.

Citations:

Times 06-Jun-2000, Gazette 15-Jun-2000

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedPractice Direction (Family Proceedings: Court Bundles) 10-Mar-2000
There should at be lodged with the court a summary of the background to the hearing; a statement of the issue or issues to be determined; a summary of the order or directions sought by each party; a chronology; and skeleton arguments. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Family, Litigation Practice, Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.81612

Hogg and Others v Raper and Others: CA 22 Apr 1998

A solicitor, drafting a clause in a will exonerating Trustees from liability for mistakes, had same protection as if he had been a trustee. He had no fiduciary breach to draft a clause without which the position would be unacceptable.

Citations:

Times 22-Apr-1998, Gazette 07-May-1998

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Wills and Probate, Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.81426

Gregory v Shepherds: CA 13 Jul 2000

An English solicitor, employing a lawyer in another jurisdiction to purchase land for a client was not himself negligent for a failure of that foreign lawyer. The lawyer was not employed as a kind of sub-contractor. Nevertheless the solicitor was negligent in his own act of paying the money across to the seller direct without first enquiring of the foreign lawyer that all proper searches and enquiries had been carried out.

Citations:

Gazette 29-Jun-2000, Gazette 13-Jul-2000

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromGregory v Shepherds ChD 17-Feb-1999
An English solicitor, employing a lawyer in another jurisdiction to purchase land for a client, was not himself negligent, for a failure of that foreign lawyer. The lawyer was not employed as a kind of sub-contractor. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Professional Negligence, Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.81028

Fryer v Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors: CA 16 May 2000

A barrister giving an opinion for the purposes of assessing the potential for a success in a case for the purposes of applying for Legal Aid, need not specify in percentage terms the prospects of success. Decisions about wasted costs orders are in the nature of summary proceedings, and an appellate court should be reluctant to set aside a judge’s assessment of a case made in such situations.

Citations:

Times 16-May-2000

Statutes:

Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 4, Supreme Court Act 1981 5(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Legal Professions, Legal Aid

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.80698

Copeland v Smith: CA 20 Oct 1999

Advocates appearing before tribunals should make themselves properly aware of current decisions reported in their field so that the court was properly able to decide the case before them. Such a failure is a discourtesy to the court.

Citations:

Times 20-Oct-1999, Gazette 08-Dec-1999

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.79495

Corbin v Penfold Metallising Co Ltd: CA 28 Apr 2000

The claimant was diagnosed as suffering from an industrial disease. He instructed solicitors promptly, but they failed to issue within the limitation period. The claimant applied for the time to be lengthened to allow him to claim. The court exercised their discretion in his favour. The failings of his solicitors should not be visited upon him. He had acted with proper speed, had employed solicitors to get on with it. The delay of nearly six months was not excessive.

Citations:

Gazette 28-Apr-2000, Times 02-May-2000, [2000] Lloyd’s Rep Med 247

Statutes:

Limitation Act 1980 33

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHorton v Sadler and Another HL 14-Jun-2006
The claimant had been injured in a road traffic accident for which the defendant was responsible in negligence. The defendant was not insured, and so a claim was to be made against the MIB. The plaintiff issued proceedings just before the expiry of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Limitation, Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.79504

Connolly-Martin v Davis: ChD 17 Aug 1998

The claimant appealed against the striking out of her claim for negligence against counsel for her opponent who had signed a consent order purporting to give an undertaking from his client when in fact the client did not consent.
Held: The appeal succeeded. A barrister was liable in negligence and breach of warranty to his lay client where he gave an undertaking to the court without first obtaining his client’s express authority to do so.

Citations:

Times 17-Aug-1998

Cited by:

Appeal fromConnolly-Martin v Davis CA 27-May-1999
A claim was brought by a party against counsel for his opponent who had gone beyond his authority in giving an undertaking for his client.
Held: The claim had no prospect of success, and had been struck out correctly. Counsel offering to the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Professional Negligence

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.79452

Citadel Management Inc v Equal Ltd and Others: CA 23 Sep 1998

A solicitor undertaking to repay client funds but who was dependent upon others to fulfil that undertaking and failed to warn of impossibility of fulfilment, was properly found in contempt of court and imprisoned for six months.

Citations:

Gazette 23-Sep-1998, Times 25-Sep-1998, [1999] 1 FLR 21

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHole and Pugsley v Sumption ChD 5-Dec-2001
The applicant sought to be excused from performance of an undertaking given as a solicitor. They relied upon the Citadel Management case as authority that, if they took timely steps to warn the person in whose favour the undertaking had been given . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.79139

Breeze v John Stacey and Sons Ltd: CA 21 Jun 1999

The introduction of the Civil Procedures Rules has done nothing to change the rules or principles affecting the receipt of privileged and confidence protected documents inadvertently disclosed to a party. He had no obligation to examine them carefully to ascertain whether they were privileged and to ask whether the privilege and confidence had been waived.

Citations:

Gazette 14-Jul-1999, Times 08-Jul-1999

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMohamad Al Fayed v The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis CA 29-May-2002
During an action, advice from counsel had been inadvertently disclosed to the claimants. The defendant sought to restrain use of the papers in the trial. It was accepted that the papers attracted legal professional privilege, but the police also . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.78567

Lord Ashburton v Pape: CA 1913

Pape’s bankruptcy discharge was opposed by Lord Ashburton. He subpoenaed Brooks, a clerk to Lord Ashburton’s solicitor and obtained privileged letters written by Lord Ashburton to Mr Nocton, which Pape proposed to use. Pape and Brooks had colluded. But, it was accepted, there was no direct confidential relation between Pape and Lord Ashburton.
Held: Lord Ashburton was entitled to an injunction. Swinfen Eady LJ thought that an order could be made for delivery up of both originals and copies
Explaining Calcraft, Cozens-Hardy said: ‘The rule of evidence as explained in Calcraft v Guest merely amounts to this, that if a litigant wants to prove a particular document which by reason of privilege or some circumstance he cannot furnish by the production of the original, he may produce a copy as secondary evidence although that copy has been obtained by improper means, and even, it may be, by criminal means . . But that does not seem to me to have any bearing upon a case where the whole subject-matter of the action is the right to retain the originals or copies of certain documents which are privileged. It seems to me that . . there is no ground whatever in principle why we should decline to give the plaintiff the protection which in my view is his right as between him and Pape, and that there is no reason whatever why we should not say to Pape in pending or future proceedings, ‘You shall not produce these documents which you have acquired from the plaintiff surreptitiously, or from his solicitor, who plainly stood to him in a confidential relation.”
Swinfen Eady LJ said: ‘The principle upon which the Court of Chancery has acted for many years has been to restrain the publication of confidential information improperly or surreptitiously obtained or of information imparted in confidence which ought not to be divulged. Injunctions have been granted to give effectual relief, that is not only to restrain the disclosure of confidential information, but to prevent copies being made of any record of that information, and, if copies have already been made, to restrain them from being further copied, and to restrain persons into whose possession that confidential information has come from themselves in turn divulging or propagating it. . . Then objection was raised in the present case by reason of the fact that it is said that Pape, who now has copies of the letters, might wish to give them in evidence in certain bankruptcy proceedings, and although the original letters are privileged from production he has possession of the copies and could give them as secondary evidence of the contents of the letters, and, therefore, ought not to be ordered either to give them up or to be restrained from divulging their contents. There is here a confusion between the right to restrain a person from divulging confidential information and the right to give secondary evidence of documents where the originals are privileged from production, if the party has such secondary evidence in his possession. . . The fact . . . that a document, whether original or copy, is admissible in evidence is no answer to the demand of the lawful owner for the delivery up of the document, and no answer to an application by the lawful owner of confidential information to restrain it from being published or copied.’

Judges:

Sir Herbert Cozens-Hardy MR, Swinfen Eady LJ

Citations:

[1913] 2 Ch 469

Citing:

CitedMorison v Moat 20-Aug-1851
A servant, Moat, sought to use a secret formula of his employer’s. The plaintiff requested an injunction to restrain use of the formula.
Held: The Vice Chancellor reiterated the principles, as to which he said there was ‘no doubt’, adding: . .
CitedMorison v Moat 1852
Affirmed . .
CitedLamb v Evans CA 1893
The plaintiff printed and published a multi-lingual European trade directory, engaging the defendants as commission agents to solicit paid entries for the directory. The businessmen could, if they wished, supply wood blocks or other materials from . .
ExplainedCalcraft v Guest CA 1898
A trial had taken place in which the principal issue was the upper boundary of the plaintiff’s fishery. On appeal the defendant proposed to rely on new evidence discovered among the papers in another action tried over a hundred years before. The . .

Cited by:

CitedL v L and Hughes Fowler Carruthers QBD 1-Feb-2007
The parties were engaged in ancillary relief proceedings. The Husband complained that the wife had sought to use unlawfully obtained information, and in these proceedings sought delivery up of the material from the wife and her solicitors. He said . .
CitedImerman v Tchenguiz and Others QBD 27-Jul-2009
It was said that the defendant had taken private and confidential material from the claimant’s computer. The claimant sought summary judgement for the return of materials and destruction of copies. The defendant denied that summary judgement was . .
CitedITC Film Distributors Ltd v Video Exchange Ltd ChD 1982
The defendant had got possession of his opponent’s papers, including certain privileged material, by a trick. A party to an action will not be allowed to use a document obtained by stealth or a trick. Warner J said, referrig to Ashburton v Pape: . .
CitedTchenguiz and Others v Imerman CA 29-Jul-2010
Anticipating a refusal by H to disclose assets in ancillary relief proceedings, W’s brothers wrongfully accessed H’s computers to gather information. The court was asked whether the rule in Hildebrand remained correct. W appealed against an order . .
CitedEnglish and American Insurance Co Ltd and Others v Herbert Smith ChD 1987
Where documents with the benefit of legal professional privilege come into the hands of the opposing side, the court should be ready to grant an injunction to prevent their misuse. . .
AppliedGoddard v Nationwide Building Society CA 1986
A solicitor had acted for both purchaser and lender in a purchase transaction. The purchaser later sought to recover from the defendant for a negligent valuation. The solicitor had however discussed the issue with the plaintiff before the purchase, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.270392

Carter Holt Forests Ltd v Sunnex Logging Ltd: 2001

(Court of Appeal of New Zealand) Lawyers had acted for a claimant in mediation proceedings with a defendant and had signed a comprehensive confidentiality agreement. The mediation resulted in a settlement. They were then instructed by another claimant in respect of a very similar dispute against the same defendant.
Held: There was a risk that the lawyers would make use of confidential information acquired in the earlier proceedings in the subsequent action, and they should not be permitted to continue to act.
Blanchard J said: ‘Certainly a party seeking the exclusion of the other side’s legal adviser must first show that there is an appearance of risk, going beyond the remote or merely fanciful, of conscious or unconscious use or disclosure by the lawyer of something relevant to the current dispute of which the lawyer gained knowledge as a result of participation in an earlier mediation. But if that threshold is reached, it is then for the lawyer to demonstrate that in fact no such risks exists or that, if it does, no damage, other than de minimis, could possibly result from use or disclosure.’

Judges:

Blanchard J

Citations:

[2001] 3 NZLR 343

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBritish Sky Broadcasting Group Plc and Another v Virgin Media Communications Ltd and others CA 6-Jun-2008
The parties were involved in litigation concerning allegations of anti-consumer practices. It was agreed that commercially sensitive documents should be exchanged, but the terms protecting the confidences could not be agreed. The parties were also . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Litigation Practice, Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.268776

Langford v The Law Society: 2002

A court should not interfere with an order of the Solicitors’ Disciplinary Tribunal unless it was out of line with previous penalties imposed or otherwise plainly wrong.

Citations:

[2002] EWHC Admin 2802

Cited by:

CitedBaxendale-Walker v The Law Society Admn 30-Mar-2006
The solicitor appealed being struck off. He had given a character reference in circumstances where he did not have justification for the assessment.
Held: ‘The appellant knew that Barclays Bank trusted him to provide a truthful reference. . .
CitedBaxendale-Walker v The Law Society Admn 30-Mar-2006
The solicitor appealed being struck off. He had given a character reference in circumstances where he did not have justification for the assessment.
Held: ‘The appellant knew that Barclays Bank trusted him to provide a truthful reference. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 10 May 2022; Ref: scu.241556

Clifford Harris and Co v Solland International Ltd and others: ChD 12 Feb 2005

The solicitor claimants had represented the defendants in litigation. The defendant’s owners had given the firm a second charge on their property to secure their costs. The sums recovered were exceeded by the costs. The solicitors sought to exert a lien over the proceeds, and the defendants argued that they had impliedly waived that lien by the charge.
Held: A solicitor might be found to have waived his lien without an express release. A solicitor waives his lien over the products of litigation only if any security taken is inconsistent with the lien. The rate of interest charged by the firm was markedly higher than would be allowed by a court and thereby lost its right to interest. The principle that a solicitor took a security with a claim for interest he would not otherwise possess was deemed to have abandoned his lien applied also to the solicitors’ rights under s73

Judges:

Christopher Nugee QC

Citations:

Times 10-Mar-2005

Statutes:

Solicitors Act 1974 73.

Citing:

AppliedIn Re Taylor, Stileman and Underwood 1891
A solicitor taking security for his costs waves his lien over the proceeds of the litigation only if the lien is incompatible with the charge. . .
See AlsoClifford Harris and Co v Solland International Ltd and others ChD 3-Nov-2004
The claimant solicitors sought their costs from the defendant former clients. They now applied for orders under section 73 of the 1974 Act to have them settled from the proceeds of their litigation now held by another firm of solicitors now acting . .
AppliedIn re Morris CA 1908
A solicitor taking a security for his costs which was inconsistent with or incompatible with the retention of his lien over the proceeds of litigation should be taken to have abandoned that lien unless it was expressly reserved. . .

Cited by:

See AlsoClifford Harris and Co v Solland International Ltd and others ChD 3-Nov-2004
The claimant solicitors sought their costs from the defendant former clients. They now applied for orders under section 73 of the 1974 Act to have them settled from the proceeds of their litigation now held by another firm of solicitors now acting . .
CitedUltraframe (UK) Ltd v Fielding and others ChD 27-Jul-2005
The parties had engaged in a bitter 95 day trial in which allegations of forgery, theft, false accounting, blackmail and arson. A company owning patents and other rights had become insolvent, and the real concern was the destination and ownership of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.223800

In Re Taylor, Stileman and Underwood: 1891

A solicitor taking security for his costs waves his lien over the proceeds of the litigation only if the lien is incompatible with the charge.

Citations:

[1891] 1 Ch 590

Cited by:

AppliedClifford Harris and Co v Solland International Ltd and others ChD 12-Feb-2005
The solicitor claimants had represented the defendants in litigation. The defendant’s owners had given the firm a second charge on their property to secure their costs. The sums recovered were exceeded by the costs. The solicitors sought to exert a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.223802

Karpenko v Paroian, Courey, Cohen and Houston: 1981

(Ontario High Court) Andersen J said: ‘What is relevant and material to the public interest is that an industrious and competent practitioner should not be unduly inhibited in making a decision to settle a case by the apprehension that some Judge, viewing the matter subsequently, with all the acuity of vision given by hindsight, and from the calm security of the Bench, may tell him that he should have done otherwise. To the decision to settle a lawyer brings all his talents and experience both recollected and existing somewhere below the level of the conscious mind, all his knowledge of the law and its processes. Not least he brings to it his hard-earned knowledge that the trial of a law-suit is costly, time-consuming and taxing for everyone involved and attended by a host of contingencies, foreseen and unforeseen. Upon all of this he must decide whether he should take what is available by way of settlement, or press on. I can think of few areas where the difficult question of what constitutes negligence, which gives rise to liability, and what at worst constitutes an error of judgment, which does not, is harder to answer. In my view it would be only in the case of some egregious error . . that negligence would be found.’

Judges:

Andersen J

Citations:

(1981) 117 DLR (3d) 383

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMoy v Pettman Smith (a firm) and another HL 3-Feb-2005
Damages were claimed against a barrister for advice on a settlement given at the door of the court. After substantial litigation, made considerably more difficult by the negligence of the solicitors, the barrister had not advised the claimant at the . .
CitedWebb v Macdonald and Another ChD 29-Jan-2010
Defendant barrister and solicitors applied to have the claims against them for professional negligence struck out. They had advised on a settlement of a dispute, which settlement the claimant now said was negligently wrong.
Held: The advice . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Professional Negligence, Commonwealth

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.222552

Rakusen v Elliss, Munday and Clark: 1912

A firm of solicitors had two partners, who did business separately without having any knowledge of the affairs of each other’s clients. The plaintiff consulted one partner in an action for wrongful dismissal a company. He changed his solicitors and after a writ had been issued, the matter was referred to arbitration. The other solicitor knew nothing about the earlier instructions, and he accepted instructions to act for the company defendant in the arbitration. The plaintiff sought an injunction against the firm.
Held: The injunction was refused. There was no general rule that a solicitor, having acted for some person either before or after litigation could not act for the opposite side. Each case depends upon its own facts. The court must be satisfied in each case that ‘mischief would result from the solicitor acting’, for the new client before an injunction would be granted.

Citations:

[1912] 1 Ch 831

Cited by:

CriticisedPrince Jefri Bolkiah v KPMG (A Firm) HL 16-Dec-1998
Conflicts of Duty with former Client
The House was asked as to the duties of the respondent accountants (KPMG). KPMG had information confidential to a former client, the appellant, which might be relevant to instructions which they then accepted from the Brunei Investment Agency, of . .
CitedMarks and Spencer Group Plc and Another v Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer CA 3-Jun-2004
The defendant firm of solicitors sought leave to appeal against an injunction requiring them not to act for a client in making a bid to take over the business of the claimant, a former client of the firm.
Held: Leave was refused. The appeal . .
CitedMarks and Spencer plc v Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer (A Firm) ChD 2-Jun-2004
The claimant sought an injunction preventing the respondent form of solicitors acting for a client in a bid for the claimant, saying that the firm was continuing to act for it, and that a conflict of interest arose.
Held: Though the . .
CitedWinters v Mishcon De Reya ChD 15-Oct-2008
The claimant sought an injunction to prevent the defendant firm of solicitors acting for his employers against him. He said that they possessed information confidential to him having acted for him in a similar matter previously. The solicitors . .
AppliedDavid Lee and Co (Lincoln) Ltd v Coward Chance ChD 1991
The liquidator of two companies brought actions asserting fraud, including by a firm of solicitors as to a faudulent breach of trust. Two firms which had been previously involved on differing sides, merged. The defendants sought an order to prevent . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.200342

Acton v Graham Pearce and Co: 1997

The plaintiff had been convicted on criminal charges but then acquitted on Appeal. He complained that the defendant solicitors had conducted his defence at trial negligently, failing to take steps which reasonably competent solicitors would have taken.
Held: The complaint was made out. The solicitors’ failures were not limited to preliminary decisions and were not within the scope of the forensic immunity established by Rees v Sinclair . There was no public policy objection to the plaintiff’s claim since far from challenging the final subsisting decision of a court his claim was entirely consistent with his acquittal on appeal. The court would grant anonymity to a firm of solicitors where serious allegations were made.

Citations:

[1997] 3 All ER 909

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Legal Aid Board ex parte Kaim Todner (a Firm of Solicitors) CA 10-Jun-1998
Limitation on Making of Anonymity Orders
A firm of solicitors sought an order for anonymity in their proceedings against the LAB, saying that being named would damage their interests irrespective of the outcome.
Held: The legal professions have no special part in the law as a party . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.200458

Chadwick v Bowman: CA 1886

The true question as to whether translations of a privileged document themselves attract privilege, is whether the translations ‘really’ came into existence for the purposes of the action. ‘I think that danger would follow if the privilege against inspection were made to cover such a case as this. It does not appear to me that these documents really came into existence for the purposes of the rule upon which the defendant’s counsel relied.’

Judges:

Mathew J, Denman J

Citations:

(1886) 16 QBD 561

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

ExplainedWatson v Cammell Laird and Co Ltd CA 1959
Referring to the case of Chadwick v. Bowman: ‘…. the essential fact was that certain letters which the defendant had received, and copies of letters which he had written, had been at some stage destroyed by the defendant, and in order to replace . .
CitedSumitomo Corporation v Credit Lyonnais Rouse Limited CA 20-Jul-2001
Documents had been translated from the Japanese, for the purposes of the litigation. The claimant refused disclosure, arguing that they were privileged, and protected from disclosure, having been prepared for the court proceedings.
Held: The . .
CitedDubai Bank Ltd v Galadari CA 1990
A document created with a view to its being submitted to solicitors for advice does not, despite its purpose, attract privilege, even though the ‘pre-existing documents, and even documents on public records, have been selected by a solicitor for the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Evidence, Legal Professions

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.196688

Watson v Cammell Laird and Co Ltd: CA 1959

Referring to the case of Chadwick v. Bowman: ‘…. the essential fact was that certain letters which the defendant had received, and copies of letters which he had written, had been at some stage destroyed by the defendant, and in order to replace them the defendant obtained from the third party, from and to whom they had been written, copies, which therefore would be available as secondary evidence of the original documents which he himself had lost or destroyed. The court said, accordingly, that these copies, the mere replacements of something which he would have had to produce himself, must be produced.’

Judges:

Chadwick v. Bowman

Citations:

[1959] 1 WLR 702

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

ExplainedChadwick v Bowman CA 1886
The true question as to whether translations of a privileged document themselves attract privilege, is whether the translations ‘really’ came into existence for the purposes of the action. ‘I think that danger would follow if the privilege against . .

Cited by:

CitedSumitomo Corporation v Credit Lyonnais Rouse Limited CA 20-Jul-2001
Documents had been translated from the Japanese, for the purposes of the litigation. The claimant refused disclosure, arguing that they were privileged, and protected from disclosure, having been prepared for the court proceedings.
Held: The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Evidence, Legal Professions

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.196687

Great Atlantic Insurance v Home Insurance: CA 1981

The defendants sought to enter into evidence one part of a document, but the plaintiffs sought to have the remainder protected through legal professional privilege.
Held: The entirety of the document was privileged, but by disclosing part, the plaintiffs had waived privilege in relation to the whole document.
Templeman LJ said: ‘In Minter v Priest . . the House of Lords affirmed that a communication between solicitor and his client is privileged provided the relationship of solicitor and client is established and that the communication is such that the communication is ‘such as, within a very wide and generous ambit of interpretation, must be fairly referable to the relationship . . In the present case the relationship of solicitor and client between the American attorneys and the plaintiffs is undoubted. The plaintiffs were seeking and the American attorneys were proffering advice in connection with a business transaction. The fact that litigation was not then contemplated is irrelevant. This appeal may serve a useful purpose if it reminds the profession that all communications between solicitor and client where the solicitor is acting as a solicitor are privileged subject to exceptions to prevent fraud and crime and to protect the client and that the privilege should only be waived with great caution.’
and ‘In my judgment, however, the rule that privilege relating to a document which deals with one subject matter cannot be waived as to part and asserted as to the remainder is based on the possibility that any use of part of a document may be unfair or misleading.’ and ‘In interlocutory proceedings and before trial it is possible to allow a party who discloses a document or part of a document by mistake to correct the error in certain circumstances. Where a document has been disclosed as a result of misconduct by the defendants, against the will of the plaintiffs and in any event not by the deliberate act of the plaintiffs, then remedial action both before and during the trial may be possible. But in my judgment the plaintiffs deliberately chose to read part of a document which dealt with one subject matter to the trial judge, and must disclose the whole.’

Judges:

Templeman LJ

Citations:

[1981] 2 All ER 485, [1981] 2 Lloyds Rep 138, [1981] 1 WLR 529

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedMinter v Priest HL 1930
The House was asked whether a conversation between a person seeking the services of a solicitor in relation to the purchase of real property and the solicitor was privileged in circumstances where the solicitor was being requested to lend the . .
Appeal fromGreat Atlantic Insurance Co v Home Insurance Co 1981
Lloyd J said: ‘if the principal has held out his agent as having a certain authority, it hardly lies in his mouth to blame the agent for acting in breach of a secret limitation placed on that authority’. . .
ApprovedNea Karteria Maritime Co Ltd v Atlantic and Great Lakes Steamship Corporation (No 2) 11-Dec-1978
The court considered disclosure of a legally privileged note of an interview: ‘I believe that the principle underlying the rule of practice exemplified by Burnell v British Transport Commission is that, where a party is deploying in court material . .

Cited by:

CitedThree Rivers District Council and others v The Governor and Co of the Bank of England (No 6) CA 1-Mar-2004
The Bank of England had sought assistance from its lawyers to prepare for a private non-statutory enquiry. The claimant sought disclosure of that advice. The defendant bank claimed legal professional privilege.
Held: Not all advice given by a . .
CitedThree Rivers District Council and others v Governor and Company of the Bank of England (No 6) HL 11-Nov-2004
The Bank anticipated criticism in an ad hoc enquiry which was called to investigate its handling of a matter involving the claimant. The claimant sought disclosure of the documents created when the solicitors advised employees of the Bank in . .
CitedMayne Pharma Pty Ltd Another v Debiopharm Sa and Another PatC 10-Feb-2006
Defendant’s application in patent revocation claims . .
CitedBrennan and others v Sunderland City Council Unison GMB EAT 16-Dec-2008
No Waiver for disclosure of Advice
EAT PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE: Admissibility of evidence
The claimant sought disclosure of certain legal advice on the basis that its effect, and a summary of its contents, had been put before the court and . .
CitedPrudential Plc and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v Special Commissioner of Income Tax and Another SC 23-Jan-2013
The appellants resisted disclosure to the revenue of advice it had received. It claimed legal advice privilege (LAP), though the advice was from its accountants.
Held: (Lords Sumption and Clarke dissenting) LAP applies to all communications . .
CitedZS v FS (Application To Prevent Solicitor Acting) FD 24-Oct-2017
Discosure of Confidences must be at risk
H sought to restrain W’s solicitors from acting. The firm was one of six firms approached to consider representing H, and he now said that certain matters had been diviluged to the firm.
Held: The legal principles were clear, and it was for H . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Evidence

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.194267

Minter v Priest: HL 1930

The House was asked whether a conversation between a person seeking the services of a solicitor in relation to the purchase of real property and the solicitor was privileged in circumstances where the solicitor was being requested to lend the deposit payable under the transaction but was not prepared to do so and declined to act.
Held: The conversation was not privileged on the ground that the defendant was not acting as a solicitor at the relevant time because he was not undertaking the duty of a solicitor on the proposal made to him but had made a proposal involving ‘a malicious scheme’ to keep the plaintiff out of the transaction, with a view to making a profit from it himself: ‘The relationship of solicitor and client being once established, it is not a necessary conclusion that whatever conversation ensued was protected from disclosure. The conversation to secure this privilege must be such as, within a very wide and generous ambit of interpretation, must be fairly referable to the relationship . .’ and ‘. . the idea that it was possible to split the interview into two parts, treating the first as a proposal to lend money personally and the second, contingent on this, to act as a solicitor is, to my mind, outside the bounds of reasonable inference . . I am not prepared to assent to a rigid definition of what must be the subject of discussion between a solicitor and his client in order to secure the protection of professional privilege.’
Lord Atkin said: ‘If a person goes to a professional legal adviser for the purpose of seeing whether the professional person will give him professional advice, communications made for the purpose of indicating the advice required will be protected. And included in such communications will be those made on occasions such as the present where the parties go to a solicitor for the purpose of seeing whether he will either himself advance or procure some third person to advance a sum of money to carry out the purchase of real property. Such business is professional business, and communications made for its purpose appear to me to be covered by the protection, whether the solicitor eventually accedes to the request or not.’

Judges:

Lord Buckmaster, Lord Dunedin, Lord Atkin

Citations:

[1930] AC 558

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedHagart and Burn-Murdoch v Inland Revenue Commissioners HL 1929
The mere lending of money, outside the existence or contemplation of professional help, is outside the ordinary scope of a solicitor’s business . .
CitedLawrence v Campbell 1859
Legal privilege was claimed in English litigation for communications between a Scottish client and a Scottish solicitor practising in London.
Held: ‘the same principle that would justify an Englishman consulting his English solicitor would . .
CitedO’Shea v Wood 1891
The court set down the test for protection by legal professional privilege. . .
CitedMinet v Morgan CA 1873
A connection with litigation is not a necessary condition for legal privilege to be attracted to a document.
The law on legal privilege had not at once reached a broad and reasonable footing, but reached it by successive steps. . .
Appeal fromMinter v Priest CA 1929
An issue was whether conversations between a solicitor and his client relating to the business of obtaining a loan for the deposit on the purchase of real estate were privileged from disclosure.
Held: They were privileged. The were within to . .

Cited by:

CitedThree Rivers District Council and others v The Governor and Co of the Bank of England (No 6) CA 1-Mar-2004
The Bank of England had sought assistance from its lawyers to prepare for a private non-statutory enquiry. The claimant sought disclosure of that advice. The defendant bank claimed legal professional privilege.
Held: Not all advice given by a . .
CitedGreat Atlantic Insurance v Home Insurance CA 1981
The defendants sought to enter into evidence one part of a document, but the plaintiffs sought to have the remainder protected through legal professional privilege.
Held: The entirety of the document was privileged, but by disclosing part, the . .
CitedThree Rivers District Council and others v Governor and Company of the Bank of England (No 6) HL 11-Nov-2004
The Bank anticipated criticism in an ad hoc enquiry which was called to investigate its handling of a matter involving the claimant. The claimant sought disclosure of the documents created when the solicitors advised employees of the Bank in . .
CitedNederlandse Reassurantie Groep Holding NV v Bacon and Woodrow Holding 1995
A Dutch corporation had obtained advice from lawyers and other professionals before purchasing share capital in insurance companies. After the purchase the corporation discovered that it was exposed to large losses and began proceedings in . .
CitedRatiu, Karmel, Regent House Properties Ltd v Conway CA 22-Nov-2005
The claimant sought damages for defamation. The defendant through their company had accused him acting in such a way as to allow a conflict of interest to arise. They said that he had been invited to act on a proposed purchase but had used the . .
CitedPrudential Plc and Another, Regina (on the Application of) v Special Commissioner of Income Tax and Another Admn 14-Oct-2009
The company had obtained legal advice but had taken it from their accountants. The Revenue sought its disclosure, and the company said that as legal advice it was protected by legal professional privilege.
Held: The material was not protected. . .
CitedPrudential Plc and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v Special Commissioner of Income Tax and Another SC 23-Jan-2013
The appellants resisted disclosure to the revenue of advice it had received. It claimed legal advice privilege (LAP), though the advice was from its accountants.
Held: (Lords Sumption and Clarke dissenting) LAP applies to all communications . .
CitedZS v FS (Application To Prevent Solicitor Acting) FD 24-Oct-2017
Discosure of Confidences must be at risk
H sought to restrain W’s solicitors from acting. The firm was one of six firms approached to consider representing H, and he now said that certain matters had been diviluged to the firm.
Held: The legal principles were clear, and it was for H . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.194261

Lawrence v Campbell: 1859

Legal privilege was claimed in English litigation for communications between a Scottish client and a Scottish solicitor practising in London.
Held: ‘the same principle that would justify an Englishman consulting his English solicitor would justify a Scotchman consulting a Scotch solicitor.’
The court described those communications between solicitor and client which attracted legal privilege as ‘professional communications in a professional capacity.’ It was now sufficient for privilege if communications passed as professional communications in a professional capacity, even though they were not made either during or relating to an actual or even to an expected litigation.

Judges:

Sir Richard Kindersley VC

Citations:

(1859) 4 Drew 485, [1859] EngR 385, (1859) 62 ER 186

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

AdoptedMinet v Morgan CA 1873
A connection with litigation is not a necessary condition for legal privilege to be attracted to a document.
The law on legal privilege had not at once reached a broad and reasonable footing, but reached it by successive steps. . .
CitedMinter v Priest HL 1930
The House was asked whether a conversation between a person seeking the services of a solicitor in relation to the purchase of real property and the solicitor was privileged in circumstances where the solicitor was being requested to lend the . .
ApprovedMacfarlan v Rolt 1872
Communications between a client and his foreign lawyers were treated as being entitled as a matter of course to the same legal advice privilege as communications with English lawyers in like circumstances. . .
CitedPrudential Plc and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v Special Commissioner of Income Tax and Another SC 23-Jan-2013
The appellants resisted disclosure to the revenue of advice it had received. It claimed legal advice privilege (LAP), though the advice was from its accountants.
Held: (Lords Sumption and Clarke dissenting) LAP applies to all communications . .
CitedIn re Duncan, decd, Garfield v Fay 1968
Ormrod J rejected a submission that where foreign lawyers are involved no privilege is recognised by an English Court if privilege is not recognised by the municipal law of the forum of the foreign lawyer. He said: ‘The basis of the privilege is . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 09 May 2022; Ref: scu.194265

R P Howard Ltd and Witchell v Woodman Matthews and Co (a firm): 1983

The solicitor defendant knew that the company was a family company effectively run by Mr Witchell from whom they received their instructions. The question raised was as to the duty of the solicitor to company and director.
Held: There is no necessary legal impediment to a professional adviser owing concurrent duties both to a company and to its members or to its directors. The solicitor owed a duty to exercise all reasonable care and skill in connection with his client’s business, the precise nature of his duty would depend inter alia upon the experience of his client and therefore an inexperienced client was entitled to expect a solicitor to take this into consideration in giving advice. The defendant was negligent in omitting to remind the plaintiffs of the need to initiate an application to the County Court in order to obtain the protection of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954.
Staughton J said: ‘In my judgment, in the circumstances of this case, Mr Witchell as well as the company was the client of Mr Mason. That seems to me to reflect the reality of the situation. Mr Mason knew that Mr Witchell . . was the company. He probably knew that Mr Witchell derived his livelihood and some profit from the company, and was vitally concerned in its well-being. Mr Witchell had first been his personal friend, and had then come to him in connection with other matters for legal advice, both as the representative of the company and in a personal capacity. When Mr Witchell sought his advice on . . [a matter concerning the company] Mr Mason owed a contractual duty of care both to the company and to Mr Witchell.’

Judges:

Staughton J

Citations:

[1983] BCLC 117, [1983] QB 117

Cited by:

CitedJohnson v Gore Wood and Co (a Firm) CA 12-Nov-1998
The claimant had previously issued a claim against the defendant solicitors through his company. He now sought to pursue a claim in his own name. It was resisted as an abuse of process, and on the basis that no personal duty of care was owed to the . .
CitedRatiu, Karmel, Regent House Properties Ltd v Conway CA 22-Nov-2005
The claimant sought damages for defamation. The defendant through their company had accused him acting in such a way as to allow a conflict of interest to arise. They said that he had been invited to act on a proposed purchase but had used the . .
ApprovedJohnson v Gore Wood and Co HL 14-Dec-2000
Shareholder May Sue for Additional Personal Losses
A company brought a claim of negligence against its solicitors, and, after that claim was settled, the company’s owner brought a separate claim in respect of the same subject-matter.
Held: It need not be an abuse of the court for a shareholder . .
CitedPegasus Management Holdings Sca and Another v Ernst and Young (A Firm) and Another ChD 11-Nov-2008
The claimants alleged professional negligence in advice given by the defendant on a share purchase, saying that it should have been structured to reduce Capital Gains Tax. The defendants denied negligence and said the claim was statute barred.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Landlord and Tenant, Legal Professions, Professional Negligence

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.183150

Khan v Lord Chancellor: QBD 17 Jan 2003

The applicant was a barrister. He had been tried and acquitted of criminal charges, and had been awarded cost from central funds. He appealed from a refusal of a claim for payment for the time he spent in preparation.
Held: The applicant was bound by the Bar’s Code of Conduct, which would have required him in defending himself to do so as litigant in person, since he could not represent himself professionally. The Regulations appeared to restrict a claim to actual costs incurred. He could not be remunerated for his own court appearances, but preparatory work was another matter. Boswell had extended the Chorley case, and his work should be recognised and rewarded. If Boswell had not so extended the rule, then this case would do so.

Judges:

Mitchell J

Citations:

Times 28-Jan-2003

Statutes:

Prosecution of Offences Act 1985 16(6), Costs in Criminal Cases (General) Regulations 1986 (1986 No 1335) 7

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedLondon Scottish Benefit Society v Chorley Crawford and Chester CA 30-May-1884
Where an action is brought against a solicitor who defends it in person and obtains judgment, he is entitled upon taxation to the same costs as if he had employed a solicitor, except in respect of items which the fact of his acting directly renders . .
CitedRegina v Boswell CACD 1987
The Court relied on the rule that counsel was entitled, in certain narrowly prescribed circumstances, counsel to brief another counsel to appear on his or own behalf in respect of a costs dispute, to permit counsel in those circumstances to claim . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Costs, Criminal Practice, Legal Professions

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.178769

Holder v Law Society: CA 24 Jan 2003

The Society had intervened in the applicant’s legal practice. He complained that the intervention was disproportionate, and by removing his right to enjoyment of his possession, infringed his human rights. The Society appealed the finding that an infringement had occurred.
Held: The jurisdiction granted by the Act was a draconian jurisdiction. That was necessary for the protection of the public. The judge was wrong to consider that an intervention raised any such Human Rights issue. Nor was there any alternative procedure available to the Society by was of a receivership. The legislator was allowed a margin of appreciation in establishing a scheme of supervision. The procedure was necessary and struck a fair balance

Judges:

Carnwath, LJ, Sir Christopher Staughton

Citations:

Times 29-Jan-2003, Gazette 20-Mar-2003, [2003] EWCA Civ 39, [2003] 1 WLR 1059

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights , Solicitors Act 1974

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedGiles v The Law Society CA 20-Oct-1995
A notice of the Law Society’s suspicion of dishonesty founding an intervention in a solicitor’s practice, did not need to particularise the acts suspected. Sedley LJ said: ‘it is by common consent a matter for the court’s judgment [on an application . .
Appeal fromHolder v Law Society ChD 25-Jul-2002
The applicant solicitors’ practice had been subject to an intervention by the respondent. He claimed that by intervening in his practice, his human right to enjoy his possessions without interference had been infringed.
Held: The power of . .
CitedBuckley v Law Society (No 2) ChD 1984
A court deciding a case about a solicitor under paragraph 6(5) of schedule 1 should come to its conclusion in the light of all the evidence existing at the time the matter came to be decided and not at the time of the relevant intervention. When . .
CitedDooley v The Law Society (No 1) ChD 15-Sep-2000
When considering an application for the Law Society to be ordered to withdraw an intevention in a solicitor’s practice, the court undertakes a two stage process: ‘First it must decide whether the grounds under paragraph 1 are made out; in this case, . .

Cited by:

CitedSritharan v Law Society CA 27-Apr-2005
The Law Society had intervened in the applicant’s legal practice as a solicitor, and his practising certificate had been automatically suspended. He applied to the court to remove the suspension.
Held: The powers exercised were statutory. The . .
CitedSimms and others v The Law Society CA 12-Jul-2005
The appellant challenged intervention proceedings brought against his solicitors practice by the respondent. Following disciplinary proceedings, the Society had obtained summary judgment rejecting the application, and awarding costs. The solicitor . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Human Rights

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.178783

Law Society v Southall: CA 14 Dec 2001

In making a strike out decision under Part 24, the court of first instance was exercising a discretion which an appellate court should be reluctant to disturb. The court should only interfere in the case of a manifest error. The Law Society had intervened in the legal practice of the respondent’s late husband. The court had struck out a claim by the Society that the home had not been validly transferred to her. That decision was not outside those open to the court on the evidence. There was no applicable limitation period in a case concerning gifts made by the debtor.

Judges:

Lord Justice Peter Gibson, Lord Justice Mantell and Mr Justice Wall

Citations:

Times 07-Jan-2002, [2002] BPIR 336

Statutes:

Civil Procedure Rules Part 24

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Application for leaveLaw Society v Southall CA 17-May-2001
Application for leave to appeal. . .

Cited by:

CitedHill (As Trustee In Bankruptcy of Nurkowski) v Spread Trustee Company Ltd and Another CA 12-May-2006
The defendants sought relief for transactions entered into at an undervalue. The bankrupt had entered into charges and an assignment of a loan account in their favour before his bankruptcy, and the trustee had obtained an order for them to be set . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Civil Procedure Rules, Legal Professions, Limitation

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.167350

Longstaff and Another v Birtles and Others: CA 26 Jul 2001

The claimants were clients of a firm of solicitors. At the suggestion of the solicitors, they entered into a partnership with the solicitors to run a hotel. No suggestion was made that they should seek independent advice. The business failed, and they claimed damages for professional negligence.
Held: The duty to the client was paramount, including the duty to cause the client to receive independent legal advice. The defendant’s solicitors’ fiduciary duty extended beyond the termination of the retainer. The proceedings being amended to add a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, they were entitled to equitable compensation for losses occasioned.

Judges:

Lord Justice Laws, Lord Justice Mummery, Sir Anthony Evans

Citations:

Gazette 06-Sep-2001, Times 18-Sep-2001, [2001] EWCA Civ 1219, [2002] 1 WLR 470

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRatiu, Karmel, Regent House Properties Ltd v Conway CA 22-Nov-2005
The claimant sought damages for defamation. The defendant through their company had accused him acting in such a way as to allow a conflict of interest to arise. They said that he had been invited to act on a proposed purchase but had used the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Equity

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.159910

SMC Engineering (Bristol) Ltd v Fraser and Another: CA 26 Jan 2001

In a County Court case, one party complained that the solicitors representing the other party, a corporation, had previously acted for them. The court made an order requiring the corporate litigant to appoint another firm of solicitors. The corporation appealed. The order was lifted. Its form was objectionable in that it positively required the appointment of a different firm. A proper order was merely an order that the solicitors should not continue to represent that litigant.

Citations:

Times 26-Jan-2001

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice, Legal Professions

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.89308

Bolkiah v KPMG (A Firm): ChD 25 Sep 1998

A company who had custody of confidential information and who sought to act for another client from whom the confidential information had to be protected, had to have its claim to be able to protect that confidentiality examined skeptically by the courts.

Citations:

Times 25-Sep-1998

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromBolkiah v KPMG (A Firm) CA 22-Oct-1998
When considering whether an accountancy firm could be permitted to conduct an investigation on behalf of solicitors acting in a matter acting against a client for whom it still held confidential information, the court could find a balance between . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Intellectual Property, Legal Professions

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.78468

Cornwall Gardens Plc Ltd v R O Garrard and Co Ltd and Another: CA 19 Jun 2001

The guidelines as to the circumstances in which counsel should be restrained from putting forward allegations of fraud, should be applied also in cases involving allegations of malicious falsehood. Counsel should not draft and present a pleading containing an allegation of fraud without both clear instructions to do so, and reasonably credible and admissible evidence to establish a prima facie case of fraud.

Citations:

Times 19-Jun-2001

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Legal Professions

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.79513

Lillicrap v Nalder: CA 1993

A property developer sued his solicitor for negligent advice on the purchase of a property. The solicitor wished to rely on previous retainers, in which the developer had ignored advice, so as to challenge the developer’s assertions that, with proper advice, the developer would not have purchased the property.
Held:
Dillon LJ, adopted the formulation of the scope of waiver set out by May J at first instance: ‘A client who sues his solicitor invites the court to adjudicate the dispute and thereby, in my judgment, waives privilege and confidence to the extent that is necessary to enable the court to do so fully and fairly in accordance with the law including the law of evidence. I suspect that at the fringes each case will depend on its own facts. Normally the waiver will extend to facts and documents material to the cause of action upon which the plaintiff sues and the defendant’s proper defence to that cause of action. The bringing of a claim for negligence in relation to a particular retainer will normally be a waiver of privilege and confidence for facts and documents relating to that retainer, but not without more for those relating to other discrete retainers’ Dillon LJ then added: ‘The waiver can only extend to matters which are relevant to an issue in the proceedings and, privilege apart, admissible in evidence. There is no waiver for a roving search into anything else in which the Solicitor or any other solicitor may have happened to have acted for the clients. But the waiver must go far enough, not merely to entitle the plaintiff to establish his cause of action, but to enable the defendant to establish a defence to the cause of action if he has one. Thus, it would extend to matters under earlier retainers, as in the hypothetical example I have given, which established that the experience of the client, was, to the knowledge of the solicitor, such that the solicitor was not in breach of duty as alleged.’
Russell LJ expressed the test: ‘by bringing civil proceedings against his solicitor, a client impliedly waives privilege in respect of all matters which are relevant to the suit he pursues and, most particularly, where the disclosure of privileged matters is required to enable justice to be done. This is another way of expressing the view that May J expressed in his judgment in the passage to which Dillon LJ has referred.’
Farquharson LJ said: ‘For my part, I would have difficulty in holding that the defendants should, as a matter of principle, be prevented from adducing evidence which is relevant to that issue. A proper interpretation of the waiver in this case is, in my judgment, one that embraces not only the documents and advice arising from the Heligan Manor transaction, but also documents or information otherwise subject to privilege which are relevant to the issues between the parties and it would be unfair to exclude.’

Judges:

Dillon, Russell, Farquharson LJJ

Citations:

[1993] 1 WLR 94

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedFarm Assist Ltd v Secretary of State for Environment Food and Rural Affairs TCC 12-Dec-2008
The claimant, now in liquidation, sought to have set aside for economic duress the mediated settlement of its dispute with the defendant. The defendant sought disclosure of legal and similar advice given to the claimant.
Held: Paragon Finance . .
CitedNederlandse Reassurantie Groep Holding NV v Bacon and Woodrow Holding 1995
A Dutch corporation had obtained advice from lawyers and other professionals before purchasing share capital in insurance companies. After the purchase the corporation discovered that it was exposed to large losses and began proceedings in . .
CitedHayes v Dowding 1996
Disputes over the running of a private company had been compromised by the plaintiffs’ solicitors. The plaintiffs sought to upset the compromise on the basis that they had been induced by a misrepresentation. The Defendants sought disclosure of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Legal Professions

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.521200

Waugh v H B Clifford and Sons: CA 1982

The plaintiffs initially sued Clifford, a building company, in contract and tort, seeking damages arising from defective building work in the erection of semi-detached dwelling houses on land they had acquired from Clifford. Both parties retained solicitors to act for them. Clifford instructed its solicitors to propose settlement of the proceedings to the plaintiffs. It suggested that in lieu of paying damages, Clifford would purchase the defective dwellings from the plaintiffs. Negotiations to achieve this end took place between the solicitors. One of the matters being negotiated was the manner in which the price at which Clifford would purchase the properties from the plaintiffs should be determined. A suggested solution was that agreement be reached on a valuer. Prior to agreement being reached for settlement of the proceedings, Clifford advised an employee of the firm of solicitors retained by it that it would not agree to the nomination of the particular valuer who had been proposed by the plaintiffs. That instruction was not received by the principal in the firm who was negotiating on behalf of Clifford prior to agreement being reached. Clifford’s solicitor agreed with the plaintiff’s solicitor that the proceedings be resolved on the basis that the dwellings would be acquired by Clifford at a price determined by the valuer who Clifford had instructed was not acceptable to it.
In a suit brought by the plaintiffs for specific performance of the agreement evidenced by the exchange of letters between solicitors in the original proceedings, Clifford defended the proceedings on the basis that no agreement had been entered into by it, as its solicitors had no authority to make that agreement on its behalf. Clifford was unsuccessful in its defence of the specific performance suit, notwithstanding a finding that its solicitors did not have express authority to agree in the terms which they did.
Held: A lawyer may have ostensible authority to enter into a contract that compromises an action so long as the contract does not contain terms which are ‘collateral to the action’. He said: ‘The law thus became well established that the solicitor or counsel retained in an action has an implied authority as between himself and his client to compromise the suit without reference to the client, provided that the compromise does not involve matter ‘collateral to the action’; and ostensible authority, as between himself and the opposing litigant, to compromise the suit without actual proof of authority, subject to the same limitation; and that a compromise does not involve ‘collateral matter’ merely because it contains terms which the Court could not have ordered by way of judgment in the action . .’
After considering the implied authority as between the legal advocate and his or her client, he continued: ‘It follows in my view that a solicitor (or counsel) may in a particular case have ostensible authority vis-?a-vis the opposing litigant where he has no implied authority vis-?a-vis his client. I see no objection to that. All that the opposing litigant need ask himself when testing the ostensible authority of the solicitor or counsel is the question whether the compromise contains matter ‘collateral to the suit’. The magnitude of the compromise, or the burden which its terms impose on the other party, is irrelevant.’ He set out the justification for the principle: ‘I think it would be regrettable if this Court were to place too restrictive a limitation on the ostensible authority of solicitors to bind their clients to a compromise . . So many compromises are made in court or in counsel’s chambers, in the presence of a solicitor but not the client. This is almost inevitable where a corporation is involved. It is highly undesirable that the Court should place any unnecessary impediments in the way of that convenient procedure. A party on one side of the record and his solicitor ought usually to be able to rely without question on the existence of the authority of the solicitor on the other side of the record, without demanding that the seal of the corporation be affixed; or that a director should sign who can show that the articles confer the requisite power upon him; or that the solicitor’s correspondence with his client be produced to prove the authority of the solicitor.’

Judges:

Brightman LJ

Citations:

[1982] Ch 374

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedNewell, Regina v CACD 30-Mar-2012
The appellant challenged the introduction in evidence of a previous inconsistent statement lodged on his behalf by counsel on a Plea and Case Management Form at a directions hearing.
Held: The appeal was allowed. An advocate plainly has . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 08 May 2022; Ref: scu.452401

C v C: 1997

The parties contested the costs of conveyancing work undertaken as a result of ancillary relief proceedings. It was assumed that the work was non-contentious.

Citations:

[1997] 2 FLR 22

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBilkus v Stockler Brunton (A Firm) CA 16-Feb-2010
Solicitors appealed against the rejection of their claim for an uplift in their fees amounting to andpound;50,000, based on the value element in the transaction in the 1994 Order. The court had to decide whether the matter came under the rules as a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 07 May 2022; Ref: scu.401612

Clarke v Lucas LLP: 2009

Following the completion of the sale of a property, the mortgagee was demanding payment of all sums due, which was approximately double the value of the plot in respect of which the defendant solicitors’ undertaking had been given. The court was asked to enforce the standard form undertaking. Miss Sarah Asplin QC said: ‘Despite the fact that the amount demanded here is approximately double the value of Plot 3, I accept Mr Pay’s submissions in this regard. Mr Kenny is entitled to demand the full sum due, and Lucas should be taken to have contemplated that that might well be the case, especially in the light of the fact that their client was developing the Site as a whole. In this regard, I also take into account the extract from the Solicitors’ Code of Conduct and the Guide to it, to which I was referred. Such a demand is not therefore, something which can be categorised as wholly unreasonable or outside Lucas’ contemplation.’

Judges:

Miss Sarah Asplin QC

Citations:

[2009] EWHC 1952 (Ch)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedThames Valley Housing Association Ltd and Others v Elegant Homes (Guernsey) Ltd and Others ChD 27-Oct-2009
The claimant sought to enforce against the defendant’s solicitors an undertaking given by them. The claimant contracted to buy property subject to a charge in favour of the third defendant bank securing loans over other property. The bank gave no . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 07 May 2022; Ref: scu.377318

In Re Laceward Ltd: ChD 1981

The expression ‘proceedings to recover costs’ in the Solicitors’ Remuneration Order 1972 . . includes a winding up petition even though such a petition does not lead to an order for payment of the sum in question. It may well be, and I incline to the view, that this conclusion would apply to a bankruptcy petition.’
An untaxed solicitor’s bill of costs is a disputed debt, and: ‘Before such taxation takes place [that’s to say, taxation of the Bill of Costs concerned] there is no certainty whatever as to whether all or any specific part of the debt alleged by the petition will be found truly due to the Petitioners.’

Judges:

Slade J

Citations:

[1981] 1 WLR 133

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedTruex v Toll ChD 6-Mar-2009
The bankrupt appealed against an order in bankruptcy made against her on application by her former solicitors in respect of their unpaid costs. The bankrupt said that since the bill was yet untaxed, it might be altered and could not base a statutory . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Insolvency

Updated: 07 May 2022; Ref: scu.317856

Carter, Esq v Sir William Henry Palmer, Bart: 17 Mar 1842

The employment of counsel as confidential legal adviser disables him from purchasing for his own benefit charges on his client’s etates, without his permission ; and although the confidential employment ceases, the disability continues as long as the reasons on which it is founded continue to operate.
C, a barrister, who had been for several years confidential and advising couunsel to P, and had, by reason of that relation, acquired an intimate knowledge of his property and liabilities, and was particularly consulted as to a compromise of securities given by P for a debt which C considered not to be recoverable for the full amount, purchased these securities for less than their nominal amount, without notice to P after ceasing to be his counsel.
Held: that C’s purchase, while the compromise proposed by P was feasible, was in trust for P ; and that C was entitled only to the sum he had paid, with interest according to the course of the Court.

Citations:

[1842] EngR 397, (1841,1842) 8 Cl and Fin 657, (1842) 8 ER 256

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedFHR European Ventures Llp and Others v Cedar Capital Partners Llc SC 16-Jul-2014
Approprietary remedy against Fraudulent Agent
The Court was asked whether a bribe or secret commission received by an agent is held by the agent on trust for his principal, or whether the principal merely has a claim for equitable compensation in a sum equal to the value of the bribe or . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Agency

Updated: 07 May 2022; Ref: scu.307352

Crossley v Crowther: 20 Nov 1851

A, who was an equitable mortgagee by deposit of deeds ot property belonging to the estate of B, was paid off by C, on an agreement with the executors of B. (as their solicitor stated) that proceedings should be taken in A’s name to enforce the mortage security, and thereby to effect a sale of the whole or part of the mortgaged property; and the solicitor of the executors filed a claim for foreclosure in the name of A against the representatives of B. A denied that he had given authority to file the claim in his name, and moved that it might be taken off the file. Held that, there being only assertion against assertion, and the solicitor alone stating that the instructions were given in the presence of A, the case was to be governed by Allen v. Bone, and the claim was dismissed, with costs, to be paid by the solicitor.
That, in such a case, the Court could not adjudicate between the solicitor, by whom the claim was filed, and the Defendants, the representatives of B, by whom the instructions were given to file the claim in A’s name; and the Court left the solieitor to any legal remedy he might have against such parties.

Judges:

Turner V-C

Citations:

[1851] EngR 898, (1851) 9 Hare 384, (1851) 68 ER 556

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGriffiths v Evans CA 1953
The parties disputed the terms on which the solicitor had been engaged, and in particular as to the scope of the duty undertaken by and entrusted to the solicitor as regards advising the client.
Held: Where there is a dispute between a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 07 May 2022; Ref: scu.297214

Tyrrell v The Bank Of London And Sir J v Shelley And Others: HL 27 Feb 1862

A solicitor retained to act for a company in the course of formation secretly arranged to benefit from his prospective client’s anticipated acquisition of a building called the ‘Hall of Commerce’ by obtaining from the owner a 50% beneficial interest in a parcel of land consisting of the Hall and some adjoining land. After the client had purchased the Hall from the owner, it discovered that the solicitor had secretly profited from the transaction and sued him. The solicitor now appealed against a finding against him.
Held: Thile the Master of the Rolls was right about the solicitor’s interst in the hall. He had been wrong about the adjoining land: although the client had an equitable claim for the value of the solicitor’s interest in the adjoining land, it had no proprietary interest in that land.
The fact that the client had not been formed by the time that the solicitor acquired his interest in the land did not prevent the claim succeeding as the client had been ‘conceived, and was in the process of formation’.

Judges:

Lord Westbury LC, Lord Cranworth and Lord Chelmsford

Citations:

[1862] EngR 498, (1862) 10 HLC 26, (1862) 11 ER 934

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromThe Bank of London v Tyrrell CA 30-Jun-1859
A solicitor is accountable to his clients for the benefits which he may have derived clandestinely in transactions in which he was professionally engaged.
A solicitor was active in founding a banking company. Before its establishment he . .

Cited by:

CitedFHR European Ventures Llp and Others v Cedar Capital Partners Llc SC 16-Jul-2014
Approprietary remedy against Fraudulent Agent
The Court was asked whether a bribe or secret commission received by an agent is held by the agent on trust for his principal, or whether the principal merely has a claim for equitable compensation in a sum equal to the value of the bribe or . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions

Updated: 07 May 2022; Ref: scu.286664

Knight v Attorney General: 1979

A judge’s status does not bring her within the scope of the 1975 Act as an ’employee’.

Citations:

[1979] ICR 194

Statutes:

Sex Discrimination Act 1975

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedO’Brien v Department for Constitutional Affairs CA 19-Dec-2008
The claimant was a part time recorder. He claimed to be entitled to a judicial pension.
Held: The Employment Appeal Tribunal was wrong to find an error of law in the decision of the Employment Tribunal to extend time; but the court declined to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Legal Professions

Updated: 07 May 2022; Ref: scu.279055