header-logo header-logo

Succeeding in today’s market requires expertise, investment & a touch of excellence, says Peter Ambrose

The ruling on secure tenancy succession rights in Turley is good news for hard-pressed housing authorities, says Nicholas Dobson

 

Andrew Francis offers some best practice guidance when advising developers on applications under s 84 of the Law of Property Act 1925

The Possession Online Claims system is in urgent need of a digital makeover, as Tracy Bird explains

Some of the underpinnings of English property law should not be taken too literally, says Thomas Braithwaite

Advising on compliance with break provisions in a lease is no easy matter, says John Clargo​

How can losses incurred from construction & engineering disputes be avoided, asks Paul Lowe

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

Nicholas Dobson considers proportionality surrounding eviction from private lettings

In the second part in the series, Philip Sissons & Joseph Ollech study costs recovery in long residential lease disputes

Show
10
Results
Results
10
Results

MOVERS & SHAKERS

DAC Beachcroft—Paul Brehony

DAC Beachcroft—Paul Brehony

Commercial disputes practice expands with partner hire in London

Ward Hadaway—Maria Coster

Ward Hadaway—Maria Coster

Partner appointed to lead family and matrimonial department in Leeds

Slater Heelis—Helen Marsh

Slater Heelis—Helen Marsh

Commercial property team expands in Manchester with partner appointment

NEWS
Financial protections for domestic abuse victims would be strengthened and cohabiting couples be given inheritance and separation rights, under historic government proposals
Doctors and nurses could be sued for mistakes made by the artificial intelligence (AI) equipment they use to treat patients, researchers have warned
The law sector has been chosen as the testing ground for the government’s AI Growth Labs—speeding up development, testing and regulatory compliance so software can be market-ready more quickly
A range of options beyond burial, cremation and burial at sea could become legally available, under Law Commission recommendations
Artificial intelligence (AI) legal assistants will be deployed to cut delays in the Crown Court, ministers have announced
back-to-top-scroll