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06 March 2026 / Robert Hargreaves
Issue: 8152 / Categories: Features , Professional negligence , Liability
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Case review: a watershed in negligence law

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As part of an occasional series on the practical impact of recent landmark judgments, Robert Hargreaves reflects on Manchester Building Society v Grant Thornton
  • In Manchester Building Society v Grant Thornton UK LLP [2021] UKSC 20 the Supreme Court abandoned the rigid SAAMCO ‘advice/information’ categories in favour of a purpose-based test

The Supreme Court’s judgment in Manchester Building Society v Grant Thornton UK LLP [2021] UKSC 20 was a watershed in negligence law. For over 20 years, practitioners had navigated professional liability using the binary framework of South Australia Asset Management Corp v York Montague Ltd [1997] AC 191 (SAAMCO), distinguishing between ‘advice’ cases, where the professional is responsible for all foreseeable consequences of a transaction, and ‘information’ cases, where recovery is limited to the consequences of the information being wrong. The decision in Manchester Building Society v Grant Thornton swept that distinction away.

The Supreme Court introduced a new principle: the scope of a professional’s duty is defined by the purpose of the advice

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One out of two barristers has come under pressure from clients to act unethically, according to the results of this year’s Barristers’ Working Lives survey
The Court of Appeal has held the Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) was wrong to set aside a Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) decision on unfair pricing of phenytoin, an epilepsy drug
A flagship employment law reform is due to come into effect on 1 July, extending unfair dismissal rights to employees after six months in their job instead of two years
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