header-logo header-logo

profile-sm_7

Tamsin Cox

Barrister

Tamsin Cox, Falcon Chambers (cox@falcon-chambers.com; www.falcon-chambers.com)

Barrister

Tamsin Cox, Falcon Chambers (cox@falcon-chambers.com; www.falcon-chambers.com)

ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR

Rectification: a duty to correct other people’s mistakes? Tamsin Cox & Julia Petrenko report

Tamsin Cox & Julia Petrenko examine a useful authority for freeholders of residential buildings in relation to Airbnb

Tamsin Cox provides an update on the vexed issue of serving effective break notices

Edward Peters & Tamsin Cox lay out the issues surrounding the resurrection of a landlord & tenant riddle

Edward Peters & Tamsin Cox discuss inadvertent acceptance, disputed boundaries & consultation requirements

Tamsin Cox weighs up the successes & failures of the tenancy deposit scheme three years on

UNREASONABLE CAR PARKING SCHEME
UNEQUIVOCAL RENT DEMAND
PRESCRIPTIVE RIGHTS TO LIGHT

Landlords' obligations under DDA 1995, Statutory protection of tenants, Adverse possession

Show
8
Results
Results
8
Results

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Clarke Willmott—Matthew Roach

Clarke Willmott—Matthew Roach

Partner joins commercial property team in Taunton office

Farrer & Co—Richard Lane

Farrer & Co—Richard Lane

Londstanding London firm appoints new senior partner

Bird & Bird—Sue McLean

Bird & Bird—Sue McLean

Commercial team in London welcomes technology specialist as partner

NEWS
What safeguards apply when trust corporations are appointed as deputy by the Court of Protection? 
When an ex-couple is deciding who gets what in the divorce or civil partnership dissolution, when is it appropriate for a third party to intervene? David Burrows, NLJ columnist and solicitor advocate, considers this thorny issue in this week’s NLJ
Disputing parties are expected to take part in alternative dispute resolution (ADR), where this is suitable for their case. At what point, however, does refusing to participate cross the threshold of ‘unreasonable’ and attract adverse costs consequences?
In this week’s NLJ, Fred Philpott, Gough Square Chambers, invites us to imagine there was no statutory limitation. What would that world be like?
When it comes to free legal advice, demand massively outweighs supply. 'Millions of people are excluded from access to justice as they don’t have anywhere to turn for free advice—or don’t know that they can ask for help,' Bhavini Bhatt, development director at the Access to Justice Foundation, writes in this week's NLJ
back-to-top-scroll