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18 July 2014
Issue: 7615 / Categories: Case law , Law digest , In Court
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Company law

Smithton Ltd v Naggar [2014] EWCA Civ 939, [2014] All ER (D) 118 (Jul)

Section 190 of the Companies Act 2006 required an arrangement (which could be a non-contractual arrangement) under which a director or connected person acquired “or is to acquire” an interest in shares. There was no basis for interpreting the words “is to acquire” as “may acquire”. The fact that conditional arrangements were permitted did not require that interpretation since even a conditional arrangement still had to satisfy the words quoted even if it was conditional.

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Anthony Collins—William Hallett & Lorna Scully

Anthony Collins—William Hallett & Lorna Scully

Anthony Collins hires two talented legal directors

Switalskis—five appointments

Switalskis—five appointments

Firm expands national abuse compensation team

Mathys & Squire—nine promotions

Mathys & Squire—nine promotions

IP firm announces new partners and senior promotions across UK offices

NEWS
A High Court ruling has sent a jolt through the legal profession after a newly qualified solicitor used an internal AI tool to produce court correspondence containing a fabricated legal citation
A significant data privacy ruling has clarified what counts as valid consent under UK data protection law
Executors may be overlooking billions of pounds in estate assets hidden in forgotten investments and misplaced share certificates
Britain’s booming non-surgical cosmetics market is operating in what some critics describe as a regulatory ‘Wild West’
Family contact disputes are becoming an increasingly prominent feature of Court of Protection litigation
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