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NLJ this week: Billing & ethics

21 February 2025
Issue: 8105 / Categories: Legal News , Profession , Legal services , Risk management , Regulatory
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What challenges lie ahead in litigation? Two key areas are interim billing and ethics—explored in this week’s NLJ by Frank Maher, partner in Keystone Law specialising in professional regulation & professional indemnity insurance law.

On interim billing, Maher writes: ‘There have been several examples of courts ordering detailed assessments of law firms’ bills amounting to many millions of pounds years after they were submitted and paid.’

He also covers non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) and SLAPPS—strategic lawsuits against public participation—including the ‘high-profile case against the solicitor who acted for former Chancellor of the Exchequer Nadhim Zahawi and, it was said, misused the heading “without prejudice” in an email’. 
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NEWS
Social media giants should face tortious liability for the psychological harms their platforms inflict, argues Harry Lambert of Outer Temple Chambers in this week’s NLJ
The Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024—once heralded as a breakthrough—has instead plunged leaseholders into confusion, warns Shabnam Ali-Khan of Russell-Cooke in this week’s NLJ
The Employment Appeal Tribunal has now confirmed that offering a disabled employee a trial period in an alternative role can itself be a 'reasonable adjustment' under the Equality Act 2010: in this week's NLJ, Charles Pigott of Mills & Reeve analyses the evolving case law
Caroline Shea KC and Richard Miller of Falcon Chambers examine the growing judicial focus on 'cynical breach' in restrictive covenant cases, in this week's issue of NLJ
Ian Gascoigne of LexisNexis dissects the uneasy balance between open justice and confidentiality in England’s civil courts, in this week's NLJ. From public hearings to super-injunctions, he identifies five tiers of privacy—from fully open proceedings to entirely secret ones—showing how a patchwork of exceptions has evolved without clear design
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