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Archive: Civil way: 10 June 2022

10 June 2022
Categories: Features , Procedure & practice , Civil way
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Stephen Gold returns with some gems from the archive. This month’s column includes a nod to Her Majesty’s Laundress & a celebration of law for the masses

We have reached 1859 and 1860. Palmerston (liberal) in and Derby (conservative) out; the National Gallery opened; the first street trams introduced—in Birkenhead; a journalist specialising in humour but not law succeeds in getting himself appointed as a stipendiary magistrate; a regular economic review reveals that high wages have converted the working classes into flesh eaters faster than farmers could convert grass and turnips into beef and mutton; the proportion of prostitutes to the male population ranges from one in 169 in the commercial ports, one in 235 in the pleasure towns, one in 530 in seats of cotton manufacture and one in 777 in seats of woollen manufacture.

And The Law Times proudly announces that its law reports are to be published in six-monthly handsome volumes at considerable cost but without any increase in the cover price of the publication. In quantity, they were to

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Pillsbury—Steven James

Pillsbury—Steven James

Firm boosts London IP capability with high-profile technology sector hire

Clarke Willmott—Michelle Seddon

Clarke Willmott—Michelle Seddon

Private client specialist joins as partner in Taunton office

DWF—Rory White-Andrews

DWF—Rory White-Andrews

Finance and restructuring offering strengthened by partner hire in London

NEWS
Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP [2025] EWHC 2341 (KB) continues to stir controversy across civil litigation, according to NLJ columnist Professor Dominic Regan of City Law School—AKA ‘The insider’
SRA v Goodwin is a rare disciplinary decision where a solicitor found to have acted dishonestly avoided being struck off, says Clare Hughes-Williams of DAC Beachcroft in this week's NLJ. The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT) imposed a 12-month suspension instead, citing medical evidence and the absence of harm to clients
In their latest Family Law Brief for NLJ, Ellie Hampson-Jones and Carla Ditz of Stewarts review three key family law rulings, including the latest instalment in the long-running saga of Potanin v Potanina
The Asian International Arbitration Centre’s sweeping reforms through its AIAC Suite of Rules 2026, unveiled at Asia ADR Week, are under examination in this week's NLJ by John (Ching Jack) Choi of Gresham Legal
In this week's issue of NLJ, Yasseen Gailani and Alexander Martin of Quinn Emanuel report on the High Court’s decision in Skatteforvaltningen (SKAT) v Solo Capital Partners LLP & Ors [2025], where Denmark’s tax authority failed to recover £1.4bn in disputed dividend tax refunds
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